118 80 6MB
English Pages 210 [212] Year 2017
by D A R D ROSENBACH
UNIVERSITY
FELLOW
OF
HUNTER IN
BIBLIOGRAPHY
PENNSYLVANIA
PRESS
Copyright 1952 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS Manufactured in the United States of America LONDON:
GEOFFREY CUMBERLEGE
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Sffivettwp//
ant/
A R L Y in the year 1948, Dr. Charles W . David, Director of Libraries of the University of Pennsylvania, informed me that I had been chosen to receive the Rosenbach Fellowship in Bibliography for the following year. I had long been acquainted with Dr. A. S. W . Rosenbach's interesting books, and his unique position in the world of bibliography was well known to me. I was also familiar with the work of the historians and bibliographers who had been given the Rosenbach Fellowship in years past, and although these American scholars had rightfully deserved to be further distinguished in this manner, I could not but feel that m y own limited contributions to historical and bibliographical research were hardly worthy of this commendation. I never think of myself as a bibliographer, nor would I say that I am a historian in the accepted sense. For the most part, my work has been in experimental channels: the fabrication of handmade paper; the designing, cutting, and casting of type; and the printing of books. In working in these crafts it has been my endeavor to employ the same materials and tools and methods that were used by the papermakers, type founders, and book printers of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the cradle years of bookmaking, when these crafts reached their highest degree of esthetic perfection. In years past I had worked with the most up-to-date papermaking and printing machinery and equipment, but I was not long in discovering that my temperament was almost completely out of harmony with the fast-moving methods of the twentieth century, and I relinquished all thought of trying to become a successful printer and publisher in the accepted manner of the present day. -ν -
vi
Foreword, and Acknowledgment
I am often asked the routine questions of how I originally became interested in the out-of-the-way subject of handmade paper, and why I persist in making type by hand and printing books in the manner of the artisans of the fifteenth century. It would be difficult to attempt to set down an orderly explanation giving reasons and causes, but perhaps if I outline briefly the occupation of my workaday forebears, my interrogators may be better able to understand why my interests and pursuits have been so closely interwoven in this field of endeavor. Although, as I have said, I claim no distinction as a historian or bibliographer, my father, William Henry Hunter (1852-1906), was an editor and historian of no mean ability, and even though I was reared in an atmosphere steeped in archaeology and historical lore, I never felt that I had been endowed with any special talent in that direction. Over a period of many years my father compiled more than a half-dozen histories, including the four-hundred-page volume, The Pathfind&rs of Jefferson County, Ohio, published in 189899 by the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society. Aside from his historical inclinations, William Henry Hunter was the owner, editor, and publisher of a small-town newspaper; but occupied as he was, he always found time to take composing stick in hand and set the type, without the customary notes and copy, for his daily full-column editorial. He had learned the printing trade from his father, Joseph Hunter (1804-86), who had long been publisher of a four-page weekly newspaper, as well as the proprietor of a cabinetmaking shop, in Harrison County, Ohio. He in turn had worked in the printing shop of his father, my great-grandfather, James Hunter (1777-1829), who in 1812 had set up one of the earliest printing offices in northern Ohio. My family emigrated to this country from Scotland, by way of Ireland, during the eighteenth century, settling originally in Virginia where my greatgreat-grandfather, James Hunter (1738-1810), engaged in the printing trade, the family occupation in Scotland. My ancestors were apparently unversed and unskilled in any other means of livelihood. Likewise I have clung to the same form of occupation without thought of changing to a more lucrative calling.
Foreword, and Acknowledgment
vii
Insofar as m y early interest in printing is concerned, m y initial introduction to the noble craft was in 1895, when I was twelve years old. During the winter of that year, much to the gratification o f m y scholarly mother, m y father set up an old-fashioned printing press in the library o f our home, overlooking the Ohio River. H e
there composed in type and printed a book entitled Scotch Achievement, which he had written for the Scotch-Irish Society o f A m e r ica. A n existing c o p y of this thin quarto shows a commendable restraint in typographical composition, an appreciation of classical format, and a knowledge of press work. Although destined to be short-lived, this was probably the earliest private press in this country to be operated b y an American-born writer. T o be sure, the Appledore Press had been founded in Connecticut as early as 1879, but the instigator o f this project, William James Linton, an adept wood engraver, had been born in England, a country long steeped in the cultural private-press tradition. T h e books printed by the Appledore Press were probably unknown to m y father, although it is certain that he was familiar with the cherished
Kelmscott
books, the hand-printed, overelaborate volumes from the press that had been founded b y William Morris in England in 1891, antedating b y only four years the initial attempt at fine book printing b y William H e n r y Hunter. In an intermittent manner I have been conducting m y own Private Press since 1915, and during this period o f more than thirtyfive years I have established m y own handmade-paper mill, type foundry, and printing shop. In 1948, when I was notified o f receiving the Rosenbach Fellowship in Bibliography, we were at work on a large folio volume embracing a history of pioneer papermaking in this country, with the title
Yapennaking by Hand in America,
covering the period from 1690 to 1811. T h e material for the text o f this book had been in process o f gathering and assembling for many years; the paper for the edition had been made b y hand especially for this book in m y small Connecticut mill. M y son, Dard Hunter, Junior, adding still another generation to the craft o f printing, had designed, cut, and cast a special fount o f eighteen-point type and typographical ornaments for use in printing the edition
viii
Foreword and
Acknowledgment
of about two hundred copies, a limitation that was absolutely necessary owing to the methods of working. This was the eighth book embracing the subject of papermaking to be made at our Private Press; five or six other books dealing with the same subject had been printed and published in the more orthodox manner. From the standpoint of bookmaking, I have always thought that the two volumes produced by Elmer Adler's Pynson Printers were the finest of the papermaking books. For the Rosenbach lectures I chose the same theme that had been treated in the folio volume, with the text extended to embrace additional material not included in the 1950 publication. T h e present issuing of these lectures, with numerous additions and corrections, will naturally have a broader audience, and therefore should prove more useful and helpful than the limited edition of the large expensive volume. #
#
•
In compiling the text for this monograph I have had correspondence with numerous librarians and curators of state and county historical societies and museums, and their gracious assistance, suggestions, and advice should be acknowledged. Without the unstinted help of these obliging workers my own research in the obscure and neglected subject of early American papermaking would not have been possible. Therefore, to the following librarians, curators, and historians, my deepest appreciation and grateful thanks: T h e late Randolph G . Adams, Robert B. Brown, and William D. Chase, T h e Clements Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan; George Allen, Philadelphia; Dorothy C. Barck, New-York Historical Society, N e w York City; Roland Baughman, Henry E . Huntington Library, San Marino, California; John Bennett, Charleston, S. C.; James Brewster, Connecticut State Library, Hartford; Clarence S. Brigham and Clifford K . Shipton, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts; Gertrude Brincklé, Historical Society of Delaware, Wilmington; Charlotte D. Conover, N e w Hampshire Historical Society, Concord; Olan V . Cook and Laurence F. London, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Rose Demorest, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Margaret Dempster,
Foreword and Acknowledgment
ix
T h e Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio; Marie Dickoré, Cincinnati, Ohio; Henry Howard Eddy, Department of Archives and History, Raleigh, N. C ; T h e Librarian, Library Company of Philadelphia; Harrison Elliott, New York City; Lillian M. Evans, Juniata College Library, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania; William D. Hoyt, Jr., and James W . Foster, Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore; Adelaide L. Fries, Moravian Church of America, Winston-Salem, N . C.; Rutherfoord Goodwin, Williamsburg, Virginia; Bayless Hardin, Kentucky State Historical Society, Frankfort; Thompson R . Harlow, T h e Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford; Mrs. J . E. Hays, Department of Archives and History of Georgia, Atlanta; Gertrude D. Hess, American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia; Franklin F. Holbrook, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh; T h e late Rudolf P. Hummel, T h e Historical Society of Montgomery County, Norristown, Pennsylvania; Ethel L. Hutchins, Public Library of Cincinnati, Ohio; Dr. Arthur E . James, W e s t Chester, Pennsylvania; Eleanor Junk, Free Public Library, Brownsville, Pennsylvania; Ramona Kaiser, Ohio Society D. A. R., Cincinnati; Constance Lodge, Huntington Library, San Marino, California; James F. Magee, Jr., Philadelphia; David McKell and Eugene Rigney, Ross County Historical Society, Chillicothe, Ohio; Jesse Merritt, Farmingdale, L . I., Ν . Y . ; Mrs. W . A. H. Mcllvaine, Washington, Pennsylvania; Helen M. Mills, Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, Columbus; Clifford P. Monahon, Rhode Island Historical Society, Providence; John H . Powell, Philadelphia; Morris L. Radoff, Hall of Records, Annapolis, Maryland; Paul North Rice, T h e N e w York Public Library, N e w York City; T . B. Rice, Greene County Historian, Greensboro, Georgia; Mrs. Charles O'Neill Rich, Omaha, N e braska; Stephen T . Riley, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston; Marian B. Rowe, Maine Historical Society, Portland; May A. Seitz, Towson, Maryland; James G . Smith, Princeton University, Princeton, N . J.; Marian V . Studley, T h e Public Library of Newark, New Jersey; R . C. Ballard Thurston, T h e Filson Historical Club, Louisville, Kentucky; Arthur Trader, Land Commissioners Office, Annapolis, Maryland; William H . Vodrey, East Liverpool Histori-
χ
Foreword and Acknowledgment
cal Society, Ohio; Robert C. Wheeler, Ohio State Museum, Columbus; William Bond Wheelwright, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Eleanor S. Wilby, Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio, Cincinnati; R. Norris Williams, II, The Historical Sociev of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Samuel M.Wilson, Lexington, Kenticky.
Dard Hunter Paper Museum Massachusetts Institute of Technology December 1951
^ t m / é m û
CHAPTER
1.
The Beginning of Papermaking
2.
Equipment
3.
Pennsylvania
1690
4.
New Jersey
1726
5.
Massachusetts
1728
6.
Maine
1731-35
7.
Virginia
1744
8.
Rhode
9.
Connecticut
10.
New York
11.
Maryland
1776
12.
North Carolina
1777
and Operation
Island
.
.
.
of Early Mills
1766
1766
. . . .
.1768
xii
Contents
13. New Hampshire and Vermont
1777-93
76
14. Delaware
1787
82
15. Kentucky
1793
87
1796
92
17. South Carolina
1806
98
18.
Ohio
1807
104
19.
Georgia
1810
120
20.
Tennessee
1811
125
21.
Nathan Sellers: Pioneer Paper-Mould Maker
.
22.
American Papermakers
. . . .
16.
Western Pennsylvania
.
.
.
.
.
.
1690-1817
.
.
.
130 140
Check List
143
Index
171
f / j w / e b n s (Following
Page 178)
FIGURE
1
Forming a sheet of handmade paper at the vat
2
An early method of drying paper in the loft
3
An American-made Massachusetts
paper mould, Dard Hunter Paper
Institute
of
Technology
4
Two
Rittcnhouse
watermarks,
Philadelphia,
1692
5
Two Rittcnhouse
watermarks,
Philadelphia,
1720
6
Watermarked
initials of William
paper mill in Virginia,
Museum,
Parks, founder
of the first
1744
7
Arms of Virginia watermark
of William
8 9
Watermark used by John Waterman in the first paper mill in Rhode Island, Watermark used 1766 by Christopher Olney and John Olney Watermail in the second paper ιmil in Rhode Island
10
Foul anchor within Olney
a shield, watermark
11
Watermark used by Christopher first paper mill in Connecticut,
12
Watermark of the Hendrick mill in New York, 1773
used by
Leffingwell, 1766
Onderdonk
- xiii -
Parks
Christopher
founder
of the
mill, the second paper
Illustrations
XIV
13
William Hoffman's initials, used in watermarking in his Maryland mill, founded 1776
paper maiade
14 Fleur-de-lis, 'watermark used in connection with William Ho off man's initials shown in Figure 13 15
"BRANDY WINE" watermark waré's first paper nrill, 1787
16
Crumpled heart watermark of Craig, Parkers and Companny, first paper mill in Kentucky and west of the mountains, 11793
17
Two
used by the Gilpins in Deela-
of the "C & P" watermarks
of Craig, Parkers
aand
Company 18 Eagle watermark
of Craig, Parkers and Company
19
Watermarks of Jackson and Sharpless, Redstone Western Pennsylvania, 1796
20
" R E D S T O N E " watermark Sharpless
21
Ohio-eagle watermark of Ohio's first paper null, founded' in 1807 by Coulter, Bever, and Bowman
22
Ohio-eagle watermark in "wove" paper from Ohio's first mill
paper
jmill,
used extensively by Jackson
mid
y
T H E B E G I N N I N G OF P A P E R M A K I N G The Invention of Ts'ai Lun in the Second Century
AVING long been a student of the craft of papermaking, I have naturally included in my investigations many of the early paper mills near Philadelphia. Eastern Pennsylvania is richer in papermaking history than any other part of the United States; this region is even more steeped in papermaking lore than is New England, where as early as 1639 was founded the first printing press in Anglo-America. In Spanish Mexico the European type of papermaking had its origin in 1575, and in English America the first paper mill was established about 1690 by William and Nicholas Rittenhouse not far from Philadelphia. The dates of 1575 and 1690, representing the beginning of papermaking in the New World, lose much of their ancient aspect when we consider that the Chinese were making paper in the second century A. D., antedating the establishment of the Rittenhouse mill in Pennsylvania by more than fifteen centuries. Even the earliest paper fabrication in Europe did not take place until a thousand years after papermaking had its introduction in the Celestial Empire. Along with paper, the ancient Chinese also invented wood-block - 1-
2
Papermaking in Pioneer America
printing, as well as printing ink made from lampblack. The Occidental World owes much to the Chinese for the discovery of numerous useful commodities that are today accepted as matter of course, without regard for the hundreds of years of tradition and development. In A. D. 105, at the time of the invention of paper in China, the art of writing had been an established practice for many centuries. Ts'ang Chieh was the mythical inventor of Chinese characters, about the year 2700 B. C. The earliest calligraphy executed by Chinese scholars was inscribed upon animal bones and strips of split bamboo, materials that were by nature long and narrow in shape. It was the limitation in breadth of these long, slender substances that caused the Chinese to inscribe their pictograph characters in columns, starting at the top and continuing to the bottom of the material. Following the use of bones and bamboo as substances for writing, came the use of pliable woven silk cloth. The earliest employment of silk as a material for calligraphy was about 300 B. C., and the camel's-hair brush came into use shortly thereafter, an invention attributed to the Chinese savant Mêng T i e n . With the wider area of the silk cloth, the same habit of writing from top to bottom continued, and this same form of placing the Chinese characters in both writing and printing remains to the present day. The use of silk scrolls written upon with a hair brush dipped in liquid pigment paved the way for the invention of paper. There was growing need for a writing material that was less expensive and more abundant than silk, and also capable of receiving the firm, steady strokes of the brush. An entirely new writing material was urgently needed by the Chinese calligraphers, and the eunuch Ts'ai Lun undertook to supply this demand. Ts'ai Lun was a member of the Imperial Household during the reign of Ho T i of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and therefore he was familiar with the work of the scribes. Many years ago, in my effort to gather even a fragment of firsthand information regarding Ts'ai Lun and his remarkable invention, I visited the locality of his activity in Lei-yang, Hunan Province,
The Beginning of Fapermaktng
3
but I was unable to uncover any additional knowledge relative to his work, nor was it possible to discover any unknown biographical data regarding Ts'ai Lun himself. T h e native people of the vicinity, young and old, were well aware of Ts'ai Lun's momentous invention and were proud of his accomplishment, but naturally they knew little about his work and could not even suggest the approximate location where his labors had been carried on. Wherever I went in China, the old couplet was repeated to me: "Ts'ang Chieh made characters and Ts'ai Lun made paper." This they knew, but any further information was lacking. I am convinced that nothing remains of Ts'ai Lun's papermaking equipment, although Chinese literature records that in the tenth century a large stone papermaking mortar purporting to be from the time of Ts'ai Lun was still to be seen lying abandoned against the ancient town wall. In my endeavor to reconstruct the procedure that I believe was employed b y Ts'ai Lun and his helpers in making paper, I have macerated the various Asiatic vegetable materials with tools and utensils that would have been available to them at this early time; also, I have constructed moulds of substances that Ts'ai Lun could have had, and with these implements I have tried to imitate the procedure that probably would have been the most natural course for the inventor of paper to follow. It is my belief that the invention was a perfectly natural development, and achieved without great mechanical knowledge or skill. As with the older crafts of ceramics and weaving, the making of paper is extremely simple, and the general underlying principle of fabrication has undergone no change through the centuries. T h e huge paper mills of the twentieth century employ the identical principle of fiber maceration, and the great papermaking machines of modern times use the same methods of sheet formation that were conceived by Ts'ai Lun in China almost two thousand years ago. Ts'ai Lun's plan for making the first paper no doubt came about through his observation of the use of silk as a writing material. When the long silk scrolls were cut and trimmed by the calligraphers, the narrow unused strips of waste silk suggested to Ts'ai Lun and his associates the possibility of reforming these scraps of un-
4
Papermaking in Pioneer America
wanted material into a like substance that could also be written upon with a brush. Ts'ai Lun's helpers collected the discarded silk cuttings and, after a considerable quantity had been gathered together, they mixed the material with bits of hemp, worn-out old rope, and perhaps some sections of the inner bark of the mulberry tree. After throwing these scraps and fragments into a stone mortar, they covered the mass with clear water and vigorously pounded it with a stone pestle. The result of this beating action was the reduction of the animal and vegetable matter into separate, individual fibers or filaments. These myriad fibers were then transferred to a large stone or wood vat containing considerable water. After being stirred, the particles of silk, hemp, and bark rose to the surface of the water, somewhat resembling the blown seeds of the dandelion floating upon a pond or stream. It only remained for these minute fibers to be lifted from the water in an entangled, matted sheet for the invention of papermaking to be complete. Ts'ai Lun's most notable disclosure was in devising a sievelike mould that would gather the fibers from the surface of the water and permit the surplus water to drain away. He accomplished this delicate manipulation by pouring the fibers, in a diluted state, upon a flat screen composed of thick threads of China grass (Boebmeria nivea) woven together in warp and woof like a piece of coarse textile and held within a bamboo frame. This flat, porous surface retained the innumerable macerated fibers in tangled formation, and also permitted the water to drain through the small interstices of the screen. After drying upon the mould, this thin compact layer of felted fiber was a sheet of paper—a substance that proved to be far more adequately adapted to brush writing than had been the animal bones, the split bamboos, or even the woven silk cloth that had been used for making scrolls. It has long been my contention that the original paper formed by Ts'ai Lun and his colleagues was made by pouring the disintegrated fiber upon the mould's surface, and permitting the sheet of paper to dry while adhering to the mould. The dipping of the mould into the receptacle containing the floating fibers was an after-invention, probably not appearing until fifty or sixty years following the
The Beginning of Papermaking
5
earliest method. The dipping procedure required a more rigid type of mould than the "wove" cloth implement, and this led to the invention of the "laid" bamboo mould. The "laid" mould capable of being dipped was the real advancement in making paper, for with this later method one sheet of paper after another could be formed in rapid succession on the same mould, as each sheet was "couched," or laid down, immediately after the mould had been immersed in the vat of pulp. With the original method of pouring the stock upon the "wove" mould, there was need for many moulds, as each sheet of paper had to remain upon the mould's surface until completely dry. This required several hours' time, depending upon the weather, as Chinese paper-drying was always done outdoors. The dipping process with the "laid" mould was a decided improvement over the pouring method, not only in speed of operation in forming sheets of paper, but also in the economy of mould making. With the "laid" type of rigid mould only one mould was needed, while with the ancient "wove" style many moulds were required. Innovations in papermaking technique came slowly, in both the Orient and the Occident, but it is these slight changes in fiber maceration, mould construction, and paper formation that reveal the approximate period and locality of the paper used in making the old scrolls, manuscripts, books, pamphlets, and prints. Had there been no change in the tools and technique through the centuries, the historian of paper manufacture would find it even more confusing to determine the date or place of a particular paper. Through a study of the hundreds of natural fibers and their maceration, and a knowledge of the moulds upon which the paper has been formed, it is entirely feasible to state the date of a paper, and also decide in which Asiatic or European country it was made. It is possible, for example, to distinguish the paper of Bengal or Kashmir from that of the Punjab, or the paper of Hyderabad from that made in Madras; the Chinese paper of Chekiang can be separated from the paper of Kwangtung or Hunan, and the Japanese paper of Gifu or Fukui differs from the paper made in Kôchi, Tosa, or Osumi. In old European papers it is also possible to differentiate the paper of Italy from that of France or Holland, or to identify English,
6
Papermaking in Pioneer America
German, or Swedish paper, even though it is not watermarked. The oldest specimen in the Paper Museum of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is Chinese and dates from the sixth century; this paper was made on "laid" bamboo moulds and is composed of either hemp (Crotalaria juncea) or the inner bark of the mulberry tree (Broussonetia papyrifera). These excellent fibers produced soft, absorbent paper, admirably adapted for Chinese calligraphy with the sure, firm strokes of the hair brush, or for the old-style printing of hand-cut Chinese wood blocks. The earliest text printing upon paper was accomplished in A. D. 770 by Chinese craftsmen working in Japan under the sponsorship of the Empress Shötoku; the first pictorial printing from wood blocks was done in China by Wang Chieh in A. D. 868. At the time of this original printing in the eighth and ninth centuries there was an abundance of paper in China, but it was the soft, pliable, absorbent paper that had been made primarily for writing with a brush. The first printers of China did not have paper that had been made especially for their use. The soft writing paper was, however, well suited for wood-block printing, and it was a simple task to adapt the method of printing to the paper at hand. With the pliable, brush-writing paper it required only that the incised wood block be dabbed with pigment, the slightly moist paper laid over the inked block and the upper side of the paper rubbed with a coir-fiber tool until a clear impression was made. This is the most elementary form of printing. As previously outlined, the method used in accomplishing the first Oriental printing was influenced by the available paper, and in the Occident this same general condition also prevailed. Papermaking was introduced into Spain in 1151, almost three centuries before printing was practiced in Europe. As in China, the first paper produced in Europe had been made for the purpose of writing. The European calligraphers made use of crow, goose, and eagle quills for their writing, and this technique required a firm, hard-sized linen and cotton rag paper—the opposite of the sort of paper that the Chinese scholars needed for their brush writing. When printing was introduced into Europe in the fifteenth century the only paper
The Beginning
of Fapermaking
7
available for the work was the inflexible rag paper that had been rendered impervious to fluid writing ink by dipping each sheet in a gelatin, or glue, extracted from the hides and hoofs of animals. This all-rag paper was too resistant to be printed upon in the simple Chinese manner. It was necessary to devise a mechanical printing press capable of making a strong, robust impression from wood blocks and movable types. W e have to this day, therefore, two distinct schools of printing—the Oriental and the Occidental, each directly influenced by the paper available at the time of the introduction of printing in the East and in the West. In my investigations of Asiatic papermaking I have visited practically every locality where paper has been made through the centuries by the ancient hand methods. My various journeys were undertaken years ago, before Asia became torn with war, revolution, political upheaval, occupation, and aggression. I have been kindly and generously received by the humble native papermakers in the villages of China, Korea, Japan, Manchuria, Siam, IndoChina, the East Indies, Malaysia, all the papermaking districts of India, and dozens of the remote islands of the Pacific. A craftsman could have only the highest respect and admiration for these industrious papermakers who have, from generation to generation, taught the mysteries of their art and fostered the noble calling of papermaking through the centuries as a useful and significant industry. As stated, paper was invented in China as early as A. D. 105, and for hundreds of years the Chinese artisans held the discovery in secret. The invention did not reach neighboring Korea until the year 600, and a few years later the Koreans introduced the craft into Japan. Traveling westward, papermaking was practiced in Samarkand in 751, spreading by the caravan routes to Baghdad forty-two years later; then further westward to Egypt in the tenth century, and along the Mediterranean Sea to Morocco, where paper was made in the year 1100. From Morocco the natural route led to Spain when in Játiva, an ancient town of Valencia, the first paper in Europe was made about 1151. In Italy there was a paper mill in Fabriano in 1276, and in Troyes, France, in 1348; Germany's earliest paper mill was founded in 1390 by Ulman Stromer in
8
Papermaking in Pioneer America
Nürnberg, the half-timbered mill building being pictured a hundred years later in Schedel's Liber Chronic/mem, published in 1493. In Poland, paper was made in 1491, in Austria in 1498, and in Russia in the year 1576. The John Tate mill was established in Hertford, England, about 1494, and there were papermakers in Dortrecht, Holland, by the year 1586. Paper was fabricated in Denmark in 1635, and in Norway in 1690. The craft of forming sheets of paper in a hand mould in the European manner reached the New World without great delay, first in Mexico, in Culhuacán, in the year 1575, by the Spanish; and in Pennsylvania, about 1690, by a German-born family of skilled papermakers.
T H E EQUIPMENT AND THE O P E R A T I O N OF T H E EARLY M I L L S
H E art of printing preceded the more ancient craft of papermaking in all but one or two* of the eighteen colonies and states of English-speaking North America where paper was made by hand prior to the introduction of the paper-machine. Printing presses and printing types were carried along with the pioneers as new frontiers were opened, but for the most part it was only after the printing shops had been well rooted and firmly established that paper mills were built and set in motion. The equipping and operating of a printing office was a minor task as compared to the setting up of a mill for the making of paper. For the printing of broadsides and newspapers, or even for the production of almanacs and books, there were needed only a wood or iron hand press, a few founts of type properly distributed in •Although papermaking was undertaken in Maine as early as 1731-35, printing was not introduced until 1785, by Benjamin Titcomb, Junior, in Falmouth. The first paper mill in New Jersey was founded in 1726. T w o sets of New Jersey Assembly publications were printed in 1723 and 1728, at Perth Amboy and Burlington respectively, by New York and Pennsylvania printers, but the first permanent printing establishment in the colony was that of James Parker who, in 1754, set up a press in his native Woodbridge. The New Jersey paper mill was founded by William Bradford for the purpose of furnishing paper for his New York printing office. With the exceptions of Maine and possibly New Jersey it is unmistakable that in every other instance printing preceded papermaking. -9-
10
Papermaking in Pioneer America
divisioned wooden cases, and sundry small tools and appliances that could have been transported with ease. A special building was not essential for the housing of a printing office, and no power was required. Practically any empty room of fair proportions with adequate light and heat would have served for the accommodation of a pioneer printing shop, and within a few weeks' time the enterprise would have been turning out newspapers, broadsides, or other printed work. For the making of paper, however, the workers encountered stupendous hardships: a properly designed and strongly constructed building, with beater room, vat house, and drying loft, was essential; a reliable source of water was required, with the building of a dam and the development of the power; an abundance of clear water was an important requisite. Also, the cumbersome beaters, stuff chests, vats, and pressure presses had to be laboriously constructed of wood, copper, and iron. T h e delicate mould frames were adeptly fashioned of well-seasoned oak and mahogany and skillfully covered with the "laid" or "wove" brass wires. T h e papermakers' felts were made of pure wool, and those of the finest sort were usually imported from England. T h e establishment of a small printing office with its portable press and several founts of foundry type was not an involved procedure, but the building and equipping of a water-power, one-vat paper mill was an undertaking that presented to the pioneers no end of physical hardship and untold mechanical problems that were well-nigh insoluble. For the most part, the early paper mills of America were operated by transported European papermakers, so it is natural that the pioneer mills of this country were small counterparts of the longestablished European mills, at least to the extent that this was possible through the limitation of homemade equipment and appliances, and the scarcity of the all-essential linen and cotton rags and other materials needed for the making of acceptable writing and printing paper. T h e early mills of this country offered no innovation or improvement over the old-established mills of Europe, and the paper fabricated in colonial times was not always equal in technical perfection to the paper that had its origin in England, Holland, and France, the countries that supplied most of the writing and
Equipment and Operation of Early Mills
11
printing paper used in America prior to the founding of mills in this country. From about the year 1690, when the first paper mill was established in America, until 1817, when the paper-machine was introduced into this country—a period of 127 years—there were hundreds of individual paper mills, all producing handmade paper. Following the inauguration of the paper-machine, many of the American handmade-paper mills were forced to suspend operation, and it was not many years until the handmade trade gave way entirely to the machine with its faster and cheaper production. Only a few of the American handmade-paper mills survived the competition of mechanical manufacture. One of these concerns was the renowned Ivy Mills of Delaware County,* Pennsylvania, founded by Thomas Willcox of Devonshire, England, about the year 1729, a firm that continued to make fine writing and banknote paper by the old hand process until the Civil War period. A condensed outline of the actual methods used by the pioneer American papermakers will be helpful in understanding the text of this monograph; a brief account of the manner in which the watermarks were formed in the sheets of paper may also be acceptable. The most important papermaking materials that were available to the early papermakers in this country were cotton, linen, hemp, and jute. (Cotton has a cellulose content of about 91 per cent; linen, hemp, and jute vary from 60 to 90 per cent pure cellulose.) Although a limited number of small sheets of paper were made in Germany from ground wood (admixed with rag fibers) as early as 1765, wood pulp was not employed commercially in American papermaking until about 1863, many years after the old hand process had given way to the paper-machine. In the original paper mill established by William Rittenhouse and his son Nicholas in Pennsylvania, about 1690, the ancient type of stamping mill, originally patterned upon a Chinese invention, was •The Willcox paper mill was in Chester County until 1789 when Chester County was divided into Delaware and Chester counties. After this date (1789) the sites of the Willcox mills at Ivy Mills and Glenn Mills were in Delaware County.
12
Fapermaking in Pioneer
America
probably used in the maceration of the linen and cotton rags. The modern beater, or "Hollander," named for the country of its invention, was first mentioned in European literature in 1682, but no engraving of this newly conceived machine was shown in a book until the year 1718. Although the beater driven by wind power was probably in use in Holland as early as 1680, it is reasonable to surmise that the first Rittenhouse mill of Pennsylvania was fitted with a set of stampers. But inasmuch as William Rittenhouse and his son did not leave Holland for their new home in America until 1688 or 1689, it is possible that they may have seen the lately invented beaters at work prior to their departure. The early American papermakers were not backward in adopting progressive steps that would hasten and improve the process of making paper, and it is possible that Hollanders were in use in this country during the first quarter of the eighteenth century, almost contemporaneous with their introduction into Germany. Regardless of whether the rags were macerated by the constant pounding of the iron-shod, wooden stampers, or frayed and beaten by the metal blades of the revolving roll of the Hollander, the ultimate desire was to reduce the rags to a mass of disintegrated fibers, or filaments, suitable for forming into sheets of paper. It is oftentimes possible to distinguish stamper-macerated paper from that made from fibers beaten in the Hollander, as the finished paper produced by the two methods somewhat differs. T h e stamperpounded fibers were long and well drawn out, which in turn made strong, durable paper. The ancient stampers required more time than the Hollander, or beater, which was a much more economical method of preparing material for papermaking. After the pulp, or stock, had been beaten sufficiently so that the individual fibers were suspended in water as separate units, the material was ready for making into sheets of paper. The diluted stock was stored in a stuff chest, resembling a huge wine cask, fitted with an outlet which permitted the stock to flow by gravity into the dipping vat. In the earliest American paper mills the beaten-rag stock could not have been subjected to the removal of foreign matter by passing it through "knotters," screens, or strainers, inas-
Equipment and Operation of Early Mills
13
much as this method of refining or cleansing the stock was not in use until the first quarter of the nineteenth century. It is not uncommon, therefore, to find lumps, splinters, knots, twigs, hairs, and even flies and insects, imbedded in paper that was made prior to the use of the "knotter," the old term used originally in England to denote this appliance, and a name that still lingers among the workers in the handmade-paper mills. There was no uniformity in the construction of the papermaking vats used in the pioneer mills of America. These receptacles were both round and square, and owing to their cumbersome construction they were usually built at the site of the mills, the shape and design depending to marked extent upon the nationality of the workmen; each papermaking country had its own style of appliances and appurtenances. The vats in the handmade-paper mills of England, Holland, France, Italy, Germany, and Sweden have long had distinctive characteristics; even today the vats and equipment of different mills in the same country are slightly different in materials, size, and construction. As an illustration, in modern English handmade-paper mills there are two different methods of lifting the stock into the knotter: one by bucket pump, the other by Archimedean screw; also, some of the vats are made of solid stone slabs, while others are formed of bolted cast-iron sections lined with sheet lead. In making sheets of paper at the vat there was need for three workmen. The most skilled of these was the vatman, who formed the sheets upon the moulds. The next artisan in importance was the coucher, whose duty it was to remove the newly formed sheets from the moulds by couching, or laying, them upon pieces of felting. The third workman, the layboy, lifted the semi-moist sheets of paper from the felts after pressing, and placed the paper in neat piles upon an inclined table. The felts were then returned to the coucher for further work. Each step in the process will be briefly described in the order in which it was performed: The vatman stood on a low, slatted platform in front of the vat and grasped the combined mould and deckle on either side at a convenient point of balance. He held the implement firmly, but not in a tense manner,
14
Papermakmg in Pioneer America
since a great deal depended upon the freedom of his muscles. The mould was held nearly at arms' length over the vat in an almost vertical position, and with a quick, but steady, scooping movement, the vatman plunged the mould into the vat and brought it out in a horizontal position covered with a thin deposit of pulp. By an almost imperceptible tilt forward, he caused a wave of pulp to flow across the surface of the mould from front to back, discharging the surplus stock that was not needed over the far edge of the mould into the vat. This action caused a leveling of the pulp on the surface of the mould. As this wave flowed across the mould, a few rapid side shakes were imparted to it, which had a tendency to set the fibers in a crossed direction. The mould was then shaken vigorously, first toward the vatman and then away from him, until much of the water in the stock had passed through the wires of the mould, and the fibers appeared to set in an even sheet upon the mould. This manipulation of the mould was called the "vatman's stroke," or "vatman's shake" (Figure 1). Through years of practice the vatman became so dexterous that in forming a sheet of paper the time occupied was only a few seconds. The thickness and weight of the sheets of finished paper depended to some extent upon the consistency of the stock in the vat, but even more upon the vatman's ability to pick up the proper amount of stock upon the mould. An experienced vatman could make from two to four reams of paper a day, depending upon the size of the moulds and the thickness of the paper being made. After a sheet of paper had been formed, the mould, with its thin deposit of moist pulp, was laid in a level position on the "stay," a narrow platform supported by the vat at the vatman's left. Here the mould remained until the stock was sufficiently firm to permit removing the wooden deckle, or outer boundary frame, from the mould. This action occupied only a fraction of a second. The degree of firmness was determined by the appearance of solidity that traveled gradually over the sheet's surface, spreading from the outer edges to the center, as the water continued to drain through the underlying wires of the mould and evaporated from the top. (When possible the temperature of the stock in the vat was kept
Equipment and Operation of Early Mills
15
from 80° to 9 5 ° F.; in the old American mills the heating was accomplished by the use of charcoal grates, known as "pistolets," set at the base o f the vats.) T h e vatman removed the wooden deckle and passed the mould, holding the semi-moist sheet of paper, to the coucher, the second workman, who leaned the mould against the "asp" or " h o r n " at the proper angle, where it remained until the sheet had drained sufficiently to be couched, or laid, upon the felting. ( T h e nomenclature of the old papermakers, like that of all long-established trades, is not entirely comprehensible to the layman. For example, the "asp" was sometimes called the "ass" or the "donkey," presumably because of its leaning, stationary position.) T h e coucher then grasped the mould, turned it completely over, and with an elusive, rocking motion deposited the moist sheet of paper upon a piece of felting. T h e empty mould was returned to the vatman, who placed the wooden deckle upon it and proceeded to form another sheet of paper in the same manner as described. T h e two men, vatman and coucher, worked together rhythmically with two moulds and one deckle until a "post" of 144 sheets of paper, each interleaved by a felt, had been built up on the coucher's tray. T h e "post" was then subjected to heavy pressure to expel the surplus water in the paper and that absorbed by the felts. T h e early papermakers used a cumbersome screw press for this purpose, and all the workmen in the mill were summoned by the blowing of a horn or the ringing of a bell to gather around the press so they might exert their combined strength in turning down the platen through the use of a long wooden lever. Unless the paper came from the press in a fairly dry condition it was difficult for the layboy to remove the single sheets from the felts without tearing and wrinkling, but if sufficient pressure had been given, his task was aided greatly. T h e layboy's duty was not only to remove the sheets of paper from the interleaving felts, but to place the sheets in an orderly pile upon an inclined table and return the unwrinkled felts to the coucher for making the next "post." After the layboy had built up a pile of about a ream of paper, the mass was subjected to further pressing, but without the felts. This pressing gave a smoothness and firmness to the paper, and the process could be carried on
16
Papermaking in Pioneer America
by exchanging the sheets of paper in different rotation until the desired finish had been acquired. Following the exchanging and pressing, the paper was gathered in "spurs" of four or five sheets each and hung to dry with the aid of a "T" upon cow-hair ropes or wooden poles (Figure 2).* The early American paper often shows lack of sufficient pressure during the first pressing, when the sheets were between the felts; also the dry pressing was not always accomplished with care and proficiency. In many instances the paper was entirely devoid of sizing, which made writing almost impossible, and printing more difficult. In writing upon unsized paper the liquid ink would spread in the same manner as writing upon blotting paper. In printing on a hand press the paper was usually dampened, and if the sheets had not been sized the paper was too readily saturated with water. In examining seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and early nineteenthcentury American-made paper it is possible to detect the various difficulties and hardships that were encountered by the mill workers, and to trace every step of the procedure from the initial sorting of the rags to the final drying and finishing of the paper. From even a superficial observation of early American paper it is apparent that the mills were limited in adequate equipment. For the most part, however, the workers were patient and diligent, characteristics that went a long way in compensating for the lack of well-made tools and appliances. Regardless of the limitations encountered by the early artisans, it is certain that most of the old American-made paper used in printing contemporary newspapers, broadsides, almanacs, and books will endure and continue to give faithful service long after a great portion of present-day American paper has disintegrated into dust.
The Watermarks in Early American Paper Prior to about the year 1757 there was but one general allover pattern impressed in all paper of the European type. This pattern, •For detailed accounts of early papermaking technique, see Dard Hunter, Papermaking, the History and Technique of an Ancient Craft (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1947).
Equipment
and Operation of Early Mills
17
extending throughout the entire surface of each sheet of paper, was caused by the wires of the moulds upon which the sheets had been formed. The term "laid" is used to designate this line marking, which can readily be seen when the paper is held to the light. This simple pattern, showing parallel lines marked at intervals by chain stitches, was introduced into Europe from Asia. The Asiatic moulds were made of split bamboo splints, or reeds of grass, laced together at intervals with animal hair or vegetable fiber, in the manner of making a delicate Chinese or Japanese screen. When the craft of papermaking was introduced into Spain in the twelfth century, the Europeans, and in turn the Americans, used the same general construction and design found in the Asiatic moulds, only in lieu of bamboo and grass laced with hair or fiber the European papermakers employed metal wires. In both the Orient and the Occident the workers used the materials that were most accessible and readily obtained. The allover pattern impressed in the paper from the moulds, either Asiatic or European, was a form of watermark, as the bamboos, or wires, of the moulds held the papermaking fibers in slightly different degrees of density or thickness. In the European type of rigid mould used in American papermaking, the "laid" wires varied from fifteen to thirty-two to the inch, and the "chain," or lacing, wires were spaced from threequarters to one and one-half inches apart. The well-defined, although unobtrusive, markings of these wires transferred to the paper from the moulds were known as "laid-lines" and "chain-lines." The true watermarks in paper, however, were the emblems, devices, names, or initials that were bent in wire and laced to the surface of the "laid-and-chain" wire covering of the moulds (Figure 3). The same design usually occupied the identical position on each one of the two moulds, constituting a pair. The twisted wire naturally held the paper stock, or pulp, thinner along its course, and when the sheet of paper is held against the light the paper is more transparent where the wires indented the pulp. The heavier the wire, the deeper were the indentations, and therefore the more distinct and clearly defined is the watermark in the paper. (The watermarking of figures and devices had its origin in Italy in 1282. The first paper-
18
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
mark was a complete circle, typifying the endless world, surmounted by a St. Andrew's cross.) In early American papermaking the watermarks were in the form of fanning and household implements, tools, utensils, crests, arms, leaves, flowers, trees, doves, eagles, animals, human figures, and the names or initials of the papermakers. T w o common watermarks in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century American paper are the phrases "SAVE RAGS" and " W O R K A N D BE RICH," the latter lettering usually in connection with the design of a plow. Prior to about 1800, dates in American watermarks are seldom encountered. After the introduction of "wove" paper moulds into American mills, the bent watermarking wires were applied in the same manner as had been the practice on the old-style moulds of the "laid" type. W i t h the "wove" style of paper, however, there is no visible allover pattern that is readily perceptible when the sheets of paper are held to the light, although close observation will oftentimes reveal the delicate imprint of the crossed metal wires of the closely woven screen. Many calligraphers and printers considered the newly conceived "wove" paper more desirable than the ancient "laid" type, as the "wove" paper was comparatively free from the regularly spaced parallel-line indentations that were thought to interfere with writing and printing. The first use of "wove" paper in European book printing was about the year 1757 when John Baskerville, the eccentric printer of Birmingham, England, used the paper in printing part of his quarto edition of Virgil. This new type of paper may have had its initial appearance in American printing in 1795 when Isaiah Thomas, the famed printer and bibliophile of Worcester, Massachusetts, used "wove" paper in his edition of Charlotte Smith's Sonnets and Other Poems. From 1800 onward the use of "wove" paper spread rapidly in America, and by the year 1815 moulds of this type predominated in this country, their use extending as far west as Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. For the most part, in recording the history of pioneer papermaking in America, it will not be feasible in this monograph to venture beyond the first mill in each of the colonies and states where paper was made by hand in the traditional European manner.
Equipment
and Operation of Early Mills
19
During the 1750-1800 period innumerable small paper mills were established in almost every section of the eastern part of the country. M a n y of these mills had difficulty in surviving, because of the constant shortage of linen and cotton rags and the absence of trained workers who could produce paper suitable for writing and printing. T h e earliest comprehensive census of American paper mills was assembled b y Isaiah Thomas and recorded in The History of Printing in America, published in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1810. In this compilation there are listed 185 paper mills, but evidently Isaiah Thomas was not entirely satisfied that this number included every mill that was then producing paper, for he stated: Alv endeavors to obtain an accurate account of the paper mills, in the United States, have not succeeded agreeably to my wishes, as I am not enabled to procure a complete list of the mills, and the quantity of paper manufactured in all the States. I have not received any particulars that can be relied on from some of the States; but I believe the following statement will come near the truth.—From the information I have collected it appears that the mills for manufacturing paper, are in number about one hundred and eighty-five, viz. in New Hampshire, 7; Massachusetts, 38; Rhode Island, 4; Connecticut, 17; Vermont, 9; New York, 12; Delaware, 4; Maryland, 3; Virginia, 4; South Carolina, 1; Kentucky, 6; Tennessee, 4; Pennsylvania, about 60.—In all other states and territories, say 16.—Total 185. Although the inventory is moderately accurate insofar as N e w England, N e w York, and Pennsylvania are concerned, it is obvious that no paper was made in Tennessee until the year following the publication of Isaiah Thomas' book; also no mention is made of the mill in Ohio, established in 1807. It was no doubt difficult for Thomas to procure authentic information relative to the number of mills in operation, and it is hardly to be expected that he could have been correct in every instance.
PENNSYLVANIA
· 1690
URING the month of July 1638, the family of the Reverend Jose Glover, a minister of the nonconformist church, set sail from England on the ship "John" with the hope of establishing the craft of printing in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Aside from various household belongings, Jose Glover had with him on the sailing ship a printing press, a small assortment of type, and other required appurtenances for the setting up of a printing shop. Also, prior to leaving England it is probable that Glover purchased a number of reams of Dutch or English paper, as he was aware that not a single paper mill was in operation in the colonies, and without paper his printing equipment would be useless. Accompanying the Glover family on the sailing ship was a forty-four-year-old London-born locksmith named Stephen Daye who had been brought along to operate the printing press, although he had never served an apprenticeship as a printer. The long voyage proved too severe an ordeal for Glover, the dissenter, and he passed away on shipboard. The printing press, type, paper, and other appliances became the property of the widow, Mrs. Jose Glover, who, upon landing, desirous of carrying out her deceased husband's wishes, found a suitable cottage in Cambridge for Stephen Daye and his family, and in the autumn of the year 1638 the first printing shop in Anglo-America was established in the wooden dwelling. -20-
Pennsylvania · 1690
21
There are no copies extant of the first two products of the press, so naturally it is not known where in Europe the paper had been made, but in printing the Bay Psalm Book, 1640, Daye and his son Matthew used paper that had been made in England or in the Low Countries. The subsequent works from the Daye press were likewise printed on foreign-made paper, for there was no paper mill in English America until after the year 1690. Four years following the printing of the Bay Psalm Book in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, there was born near Mülheim an der Ruhr, a son who was given the name "Wilhelm" by his middleclass parents, George Rittinghuysen and Maria Hagerhoff Rittinghuysen. The settlement of Mülheim, formerly within the Duchy of Berg, became a town in 1508 and the making of paper was one of the crafts carried on in the region. Upon reaching a working age young Rittinghuysen was apprenticed to one of the paper mills in the Rhineland, possibly in the establishment of Adolph Vorster, the third oldest mill in Broich, a village opposite Mülheim an der Ruhr. It is known that Wilhelm Rittinghuysen, the young papermaker, left his native land and traveled sixty or seventy miles into Holland, but the year of his departure has not been recorded. The earliest precise information relating to the time Rittinghuysen left Mülheim is a German document, dated July 25, 1678, which he had requested as a certificate of birth while living in Amsterdam. This document, signed by his mother, brother, and sister, gives the date of Rittinghuysen's birth as 1644. Attracted by the paper mills in Arnhem, Netherlands, the young papermaker moved to that locality. Arnhem was a leading paper-producing center in the province of Gelderland, probably the Arenacum of the Romans, a settlement mentioned in history as early as 893, and becoming a town in 1233. Rittinghuysen may have gone to Arnhem as early as 1670 when he was twenty-six years of age, but inasmuch as the town was taken by the French in 1672 and left in a disorganized condition two years later it is probable that he did not venture there until the town had been at least partially rebuilt. A Dutch document, dated June 23, 1679, gives proof that he took the oath of citizenship on that day,
22
Papermakijig
in Pioneer
America
signing himself in a scrawling hand, "Willem Rüddinghiiysen von Mülheim, (?) Papermaker." The date of Rittinghuysen's marriage has not been recorded, but he had a wife prior to leaving Germany; three children were born, Klaus, Gerhard, and Elizabeth. Klaus was born June 15, 1666, in Mülheim and, like his father, became a skilled papermaker. The other two children were never occupied in the craft of making paper. While living and working in Holland, Wilhelm Rittinghuysen and his son Klaus became imbued with the plan of emigrating to America for the purpose of building a paper mill. William Penn was exploiting his newly acquired region of Pennsylvania ("Penn's Woods"), and the populace of England and Holland were inundated with tracts and homilies setting forth the advantages and opportunities to be enjoyed in that province. Penn's preachments describing the flourishing conditions to be found in Pennsylvania had profound influence upon the Rittinghuysen family, and in 1688 or 1689 they left the paper mills of the Netherlands and emigrated to the N e w World. The father was forty-four years old, the age Stephen Daye had been when he left England in 1638 to assist in the establishment of the first printing shop in the colonies; young Klaus was twenty-two. Wilhelm Rittinghuysen had accepted the strict teachings of the Mennonites, a religious sect that was firmly entrenched in Germantown, Pennsylvania, as early as 1683, and perhaps the knowledge that he would be able to continue under the leadership of Menno Simons, the founder of this religious belief, gave Rittinghuysen added courage and hope in the venture to America. T h e family, two of them papermakers, arrived in N e w York after that port had ceased being under Dutch domination; the English had been in power since 1674. The Rittinghuysen family did not remain long in N e w York, as there was no printing press in that locality until 1693, and the papermakers, father and son, were well aware that their trade would thrive only in a community where printing had been established. Through the reading of Penn's tracts and brochures, the family had become influenced by the
Pennsylvaiìia
· 1690
23
glowing glories of Pennsylvania and, knowing that a printing shop had actually been at work in Philadelphia since 1685, departed at once for Pennsylvania with the hope of soliciting help in their plan to establish a paper mill. The Rittinghuysens had probably not been long in Pennsylvania before it was suggested to them that they would find it advantageous to anglicize the family name and thereafter the father was called William Rittenhouse and the son was known as Klaus, or Nicholas, Rittenhouse. Once settled near Germantown in a community that was later called Roxborough, William Rittenhouse and his son set to work to carry out their plan of erecting and equipping a paper mill, and by the year 1691 the small water-power mill had probably produced many reams of usable paper. William and Klaus Rittenhouse were encouraged in the papermaking undertaking by William Bradford, who had conducted a printing office in Philadelphia since 1685, when during December of that year he had printed his first work, Kalendcrrium Pennsilvaniense. It is certain that the paper mill was operated by William and Klaus Rittenhouse as early as 1691, although the Rittenhouse name in connection with Pennsylvania papermaking has never been discovered in any contemporaneous document. In ·& letter written by William Bradford to a friend in London, dated November 18, 1690, no mention is made of the Rittenhouses, although the paper mill is referred to in this manner: "Samuel Carpenter and I are Building a Paper-Mill about a Mile from thy Mills at Skulkill, and hope we shall have Paper ivitbin less than four months Γ Actually the earliest mention of the Rittenhouse family in Philadelphia, aside from the marriage entry of Klaus, or Nicholas, and a statement that they owned several tracts of land in Germantown in 1689, is found in an interesting old parchment document bearing the script title, Copia Νaturalisationis of Francis Daniel Pastorius and 61 persons more of German-Tovm from William Penn, Esq., Dated Ith May Ao. Di. 1691. In this naturalization document the names "WTillm
24
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
Rittinghuysen" and "Qaes (Klaus) Rittinghuysen" appear the twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth in the list.* The earliest printed account of the newly established paper mill was a doggerel poem written by Richard Frame, Pennslyvania's first poet, who included the composition in his volume, A Short Description of Penrmlvania, Or, A Relation What things are knovm, enjoyed, and like to be discovered in the said Province, printed by William Bradford in Philadelphia, 1692. Although the lines may be lacking in metrical skill, the poem is, nevertheless, the only contemporaneous description of Pennsylvania's earliest paper mill and is therefore worthy of reprinting: The German-Town, of which I spoke before, Which is, at least, in length one Mile and More, Where lives High-German People, and Low-Dutch, Whose Trade in weaving Linnin Cloth is much, There grows the Flax, as also you may know, That from the same they do divide the Tow; Their Trade fits well within this Habitation, We find Convenience for their Occupation, One Trade brings in imployment for another, So that we may suppose each Trade a Brother; From Linnin Rags good Paper doth derive, The first Trade keeps the second Trade alive: Without the first the second cannot be, Therefore since these two can so well agree, Convenience doth approve to place them nigh, One in the German-Town, 'tother hard by. A Paper Mill near German-Town doth stand, So that the Flax, which first springs from the Land, First Flax, then Yarn, and then they must begin, To weave the same, which they took pains to spin. Also, when on our backs it is well worn, Some of the same remains Ragged and Torn; Then of these Rags our Paper it is made, Which in process of time doth waste and fade: So what comes from the Earth, appeareth plain, The same in Time returns to Earth again. •This parchment document is now in the Juniata College Library, Huntingdon, Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania
· 1690
25
The poem by Richard Frame does not mention the Rittenhouse mill by name, nor do the twenty-six lines of bucolic verse give any details relative to the craft of papermaking. The poem is interesting only because it appeared at the time of the founding of the first paper mill in America. Another contemporary writer who compiled a poem that touched on the trade of making paper was John Holme, who in 1696 wrote a series of forty-seven curious verses which he entitled A True Relation of the Flourishing State of Pennsylvania. The verses, embracing almost every trade and custom of pioneer Pennsylvania life, remained in manuscript until more than a century ago when they were set in type and printed in the Proceedings of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, December 1847. T h e stanza that refers to the paper mill bears the concise heading "Printer" and reads: Here dwelt a printer and I find That he can both print books and bind; He wants not paper, ink nor skill He's owner of a paper mill. The paper mill is here hard by And makes good paper frequently, But the printer, as I here tell, Is gone unto New-York to dwell. No doubt but he will lay up bags If he can get good store of rags. Kind friend, when thy old shift is rent Let it to th' paper mill be sent. The "printer" referred to in the Holme poem was no doubt William Bradford, who had moved from Philadelphia to New York in 1693 and there established the first printing shop in the settlement. T w o years following the compilation of John Holme's amusing verses, another writer, Gabriel Thomas, briefly mentioned Pennsylvania papermaking in his small book, An Historical and Geographical Account of the Province and Country of Perniúlvania, published in London in 1698. Thomas had lived in Pennsylvania for fifteen years, and set down curt accounts concerning the customs, trades, agriculture, and commerce of the province. The
26
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
paragraph devoted to paper reads: "All sorts of verv good Paper are made in the German-tovm; as also very fine Gerwan Linen, such as no person of Quality need be asham'd to wear." These three seventeenth-century writers—Richard Frame, John Holme, and Gabriel Thomas—all refer to the paper mill operated by William and Klaus Rittenhouse, although the two papermakers are not mentioned by name. In addition to William Bradford, the printer, the Rittenhouse paper mill was sponsored by a small group of influential Pennsylvania citizens—Samuel Carpenter and Robert Turner, large landholders, and Thomas Tresse, a rich ironmonger. By the year 1705, however, Nicholas (Klaus) Rittenhouse and his rheumatic father had become the sole owners of the mill. In 1689, shortly after their arrival in America, Klaus (Claus or Nicholas) Rittenhouse married Wilhelmina DeWees, sister of William De Wees, who founded the second paper mill in Pennsylvania in 1710, an outgrow th of the original Rittenhouse mill. At the present time nothing whatever remains of the original mill structure, as the last vestige of the buildings constructed at four different periods was demolished in 1891. The fine stone building, dating from 1707, near the site of the mill, and remaining in excellent preservation at the present time, was the Rittenhouse family home and never served as a paper mill. There is no contemporaneous inventory of the Rittenhouse mill equipment and, although we may be familiar with the various appliances employed during the period, it would be imprudent to try to determine the number and size of the stampers used in macerating the linen and cotton rags; nor can we determine precisely the number or size of the dipping vats that were in use. W e may assume, however, that there were not more than two vats, the capacity of each vat being from two and a half to four reams of paper a day, depending upon the number of working hours and the size and type of paper being made. It is questionable if all of the watermarks attributed to this mill were produced by William and Klaus Rittenhouse in the early Pennsylvania establishment. It is not unusual for historians to be
Pennsylvania
· 1690
27
confused by Dutch and English paper that was made during the 1690-1720 period in which appeared watermarks bearing the same emblems and the identical initials that were used by the Rittenhouse mill. T h e shield watermark so often attributed to the first papermaking establishment in America was abundantly used b y the makers of paper in both England and the L o w Countries. Historians are still further confused by the watermarked letters " W R , " as these initials are extremely common in papers made in England and Holland during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. For the most part, the watermarks in the paper of early American books and pamphlets are indistinct and in many cases undecipherable, the marks having been sewed into the bindings or cut at the edges of the pages. It is usually necessary to piece together various fragments to arrive at a complete watermark. W e have examined scores of books and tracts printed by William Bradford with the hope of finding Rittenhouse watermarks, but our search has led to only a f e w marks that may be definitely identified as having originated in Pennsylvania's pioneer paper mill. T h e papermarks we have uncovered and which may be relied upon as authentic are reproduced in Figures 4 and 5. Figure 4 shows two marks which were found in a tract imprinted by William Bradford, Philadelphia, 1692, entitled Truth and hmocency defended, against Caluvmy and Defamation, In a late Report spread abroad concerning the Revolution of Humane Souls, With a further Clearing of the Truth, by a plain Explication of my Sence, &., by George Keith. T h e booklet measures five and one-half by seven inches, folded in quarto, and is composed of twenty pages; all of the paper was made in the Rittenhouse mill. Figure 5 shows the two watermarks in the paper used in printing the American Weekly Mercury, Thursday, March 17, 1720, N u m b e r 13. This newspaper was established in Philadelphia, December 22, 1719, b y A n d r e w Bradford, son of William Bradford. T h e paper measures approximately thirteen by sixteen inches. T h e letters " N R " and " K R " used in these watermarks were the initials of the son, Nicholas or Klaus Rittenhouse. According to Francis Daniel Pastorius, the cloverleaf. or "klee-blatt," was the original mark or seal of Germantown,
28
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
the locality of the Rittenhouse mill. Although William Rittenhouse is usually given the honor of having established the paper mill, Klaus was actually the energetic and productive member of the family. As early as 1700, William Penn described William Rittenhouse, the father, as "old and decrepit." He died February 18, 1708, at the age of sixty-four. Nicholas Rittenhouse died when he was sixty-eight, a short time after he had written his will, which was dated May 24, 1734.
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/»v*
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NEW
*\r*¡, P\TK
JERSEY
·
¡»v*
1726
HE precise time of the establishment of the craft of papermaking in the Colony of New Jersey is more obscure than in any other eastern state. It is certain, however, that a paper mill was in operation in or near Elizabethtown at least a year or two prior to the time that paper was first manufactured in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the year 1728. William Bradford, the first printer of Pennsylvania, was the most influential and most helpful of the four men who assisted in establishing the William and Klaus Rittenhouse mill, near Philadelphia. He not only lent his assistance to the actual construction and equipping of the mill building, but his printing office was the chief purchaser of the paper made in the mill. Old accounts list sales of quantities of writing and printing paper, as well as smaller lots of brown paper and pasteboard, as having been purchased by William Bradford from the Rittenhouse mill. In 1693 William Bradford gave up his printing business in Philadelphia and established himself in New York. This move was not entirely of Bradford's own free will. He was a man of vigor and independence and while working in Philadelphia he offended the ruling powers by printing the Charter, apparently without the consent of the authorities. He also fell from the good graces of the governing faction by printing a pamphlet written by George Keith, a seceding Quaker. William Bradford was urged to leave Pennsyl- 29-
30
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
vania, but the transplanting of his printing office only added to his future renown by placing him in the unique position of being the first printer in New York as he had been the first printer in Pennsylvania. After establishing his printing shop in New York, William Bradford continued to be dependent upon the Klaus Rittenhouse Pennsylvania mill for much of his paper, as is evidenced by the following letter written by Bradford from New York to Rittenhouse in Pennsylvania: Ffrd Clause Rittenhouse, I have reed 16 Ream of printing paper from you . . . since that I have reed T e n Ream more . . . if you have more of ye same sort of paper, pray let me have it. These are also to acquaint you that I shall want some of ye large writing paper; pray let me know how much you can make. I shall want six or seven Ream, If you want fine Rags, let me know & I shall send some by Land, for I must have 6 or 7 Ream of such paper as you made before for me. Pray let me hear from you by ye next Post, which will oblige your friend, Will Bradford, N e w York, Fbr. 11, 1709.
From the context of Bradford's letter it is obvious that his need for paper was constantly increasing and the Pennsylvania mill was hard pressed to supply his requirements. Bradford's New York printing office was prospering and here were produced the first printed series of assembly proceedings to be issued in the colonies; also, the printing of numerous governmental and literary publications was undertaken. Bradford's need for paper was urgent and he conceived the plan of founding a mill within the Colony of New York. In 1724 William Bradford petitioned the New York Assembly for the exclusive privilege of making paper in the colony. In the Journal of the Votes and Proceedings of the General Assembly of the Colony of New-York, April 9, 1691, to September 27, 1743 (New York, 1764), we find the following: "Die Lunae, P.M. July 6, 1724. The Petition of William Bradford, was presented to the House, and read, praying this House to admit him to bring in a Bill, to entitle him to the sole making of Paper in this Province, for a certain Number of Years." The bill proposing to give Bradford a
New Jersey · 1126
31
fifteen-year monopoly in making paper in New York was read three times. The Governor and Council were adverse to the encouragement of local industry and refused to sanction Bradford's request. N o doubt it was thought that the competition would be detrimental to British papermakers and also interfere with the lucrative revenue derived from the importation of paper from Europe. Although William Bradford was not granted the right to manufacture paper in New York, he was not discouraged and he turned his attention to neighboring New Jersey with a plan for establishing a paper mill in that colony. Bradford was then contemplating the founding of N e w York's first newspaper, the NeiD-York Gazette, and printing paper was essential for this project, which he launched on November 8, 1725. H e could no longer rely upon the Pennsylvania mills and was reluctant to make use of paper imported from Europe. As has been stated, the precise date of the founding of William Bradford's N e w Jersey paper mill is uncertain, but we may accept the year 1726 as the approximate time, and in or near Elizabethtown as the location of the paper mill. The earliest printed notice relating to the New Jersey mill appeared in the American Weekly Mercury, Philadelphia, a newspaper that had been established December 22, 1719, by William Bradford's son, Andrew Bradford. The notice appeared in the issue of Thursday, July 3, to Thursday, July 10, 1729, and reads: June 30, 1729. An Indented Servant Man, named James Roberts, is Run away from William Bradford's Paper-Mill at Elizabeth-Tovm in Neiv-Jersey. He is a middle-sized well set young fellow, about twenty years of Age, has dark brown Hair, somewhat Curl'd, Round Vissage, grey Eyes; one of his Fore-Fingers is crooked. He wears a brown Wastcoat with black Buttons, a Homespun Linnen Jacket, a light coloured new Drugget Coat, lined with dark Shalloon, a pair of Leather Breeches, and 2 pair of New homespun Linnen ones, a pair Thread Stockins, Pump-Shoes; a good Beaver Hat, two new homespun Shirts and an old one: His Hat has neither Buttons or Loops. He is a WestCountry-man, has been about one year in the Country, and is a PaperMaker by Trade. . . . Whoever can take up and secure the said James
32
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
Roberts, and give notice to William Bradford in New-York, or to Andrew Bradford in Philadelphia, or to John Barclay in Perth-Amboy, they shall have Fifty Shillings, and all reasonable Charges. This advertisement of 1729 not only serves to confirm the presence of William Bradford's paper mill in New Jersey at this time, but it also affords a detailed description of the complete wardrobe and belongings of a papermaker during this early period of American industry. From an advertisement in William Bradford's weekly, the NewYork Gazette, for March 31, 1735, we may assume that the New Jersey paper mill was in operation at that time, but whether or not Bradford was the owner is uncertain. This advertisement reads: On Wednesday the 23 of April next, at the Paper-Mill in ElizabethTown, there will be SOLD at Publick Vendue to the highest Bidder, all sorts of Household Goods, Cattle, Horses, Hogs, Cart, Plows, Harrows with Iron Teeth, and other Utensils: The Plantation adjoyning the said Mill will also be Sold, which contains Ninty Acres, about thirty Acres within a good new Fence; about ten Acres sowed with Winter Grain. . . . The Sale to begin about ten or eleven a Clock in the Forenoon, 23d of April, 1735. The notice of 1729 for the apprehension of the runaway papermaker, James Roberts, and the auction advertisement of 1735 "at the Paper-Mill" are the sole contemporary references that can be found in connection with the earliest paper mill in New Jersey. It is upon these two meager newspaper accounts that the history of this mill has long been based, and it is unlikely that any further contemporary information relative to this mill will be uncovered. An extensive search was made with the hope of discovering watermarks that may have been used by New Jersey's earliest paper mill, but apparently William Bradford's establishment did not use any initials or devices that can be definitely identified as having originated in the New Jersey paper mill.
δ VVfS *J\e
wvti
S·.· ^ ->;•· ^ ·νν*' V'V" -Nvy > v y -Ννν -V·"*- -ν·.·ν- > v v v y •V-'-V" > v y fV* w* J»V«¡
M A S S A C H U S E T T S · 1728
VEN though the art of printing was introduced into the Massachusetts Bay Colony as early as 1638 or 1639, the older craft of papermaking did not find a place among the industries of New England until about ninety years later. With the commencement of printing in Cambridge, the eastern seaboard of Massachusetts became the literary and bookproducing center of the country. In 1728, the year the first paper mill was proposed in the colony, the town of Boston supported more printers and bookbinders than any other Anglo-American settlement. Two of every three books and pamphlets then issued in the entire country were printed within the confines of Boston; and of the seven newspapers printed in the colonies during this period, four were published in the Massachusetts seaport. In view of this predominance in printing and publishing, it is strange that the earliest paper mill in the colonies should have been established near Philadelphia and not in the vicinity of Boston, a circumstance due, no doubt, to the Rittenhouse family's attraction to Eastern Pennsylvania through reading William Penn's alluring tracts and preachments, and also to the elder Rittenhouse's devotion to the Mennonites, a flourishing religious sect in the Philadelphia region. The merchants and printers of Boston enjoyed unrivaled communication and trade with Europe, and the importation of - 33 -
34
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
English and Dutch paper had become the practice. Therefore, most of the books, pamphlets, and broadsides printed in New England prior to about 1730 are on foreign-made paper and thereby lose considerable interest as examples of early American craftsmanship. It would be most unusual to find Massachusetts imprints from the first quarter of the eighteenth century on paper that had been made in the Pennsylvania mills of the Rittenhouse or De Wees families. The building of a paper mill and the construction of the numerous appurtenances necessary in the manufacture of paper involved more planning and preparation than were essential in any other industry carried on here during the eighteenth century. To assure success, it was customary for the promoters of a proposed paper mill to request the monopoly of production for a certain number of years. Papermaking was regarded as a public need and it was not uncommon for the local authorities not only to give exclusive priviledges of manufacture but to recommend substantial bonuses as well. Such a monopoly was granted the first paper mill to be established in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. An act to encourage the making of paper in New England was passed by the General Court of Massachusetts on September 13, 1728, and a patent giving the exclusive right to make paper for a period of ten years was granted five prominent citizens of Boston. A portion of the grant reads: Whereas the Making Paper within this Province will be of Public Benefit and Service; But inasmuch as the Erecting Mills for that purpose and providing Workmen and Materials for the Effecting that Undertaking will necessarily demand a considerable Disburse of Money for some time before any profit, or gain can arise there-from; And Whereas Daniel Henchman, Gillam Phillips, Benjamin Faneuil, and Thomas Hancock, together with Henry Dering are willing & desirous to Undertake the Manufacturing Paper: Wherefore for the Promoting so beneficial a Design; Be it Enacted by His Excellency the Governour, Council and Representatives in General Court Assembled, and by the Authority of the same, That the sole Privilege and Benefit of making Paper within this Province shall be to the said Daniel Henchman, Gillam Phillips, Benjamin Faneuil, Thomas Hancock and Henry Dering, and to their Associates, for and during the Term of Ten Years from and after the
Massachusetts
· 1128
35
Tenth Day of December next ensuing: Provided the aforesaid Daniel Henchman, Gillam Phillips, Benjamin Faneuil, Thomas Hancock and Henry Dering, shall make or cause to be made within this Province, in the space of Twelve Months next after the Tenth Day of December next, Two hundred Rheam of good Merchantable Brown Paper, and Printing Paper, Sixty Rheam thereof at least to be Printing Paper, and within the space of Twelve Months next coming, shall cause to be made within this Province Fifty Rheam of good Merchantable Writing Paper, of equal goodness with the Paper commonlv stampt with the London Arms, over and above the aforesaid Two hundred Rheam of Brown Paper, and Printing Paper. Daniel Henchman, the principal member of the Massachusetts papermaking firm, was a bookbinder by trade with a prosperous publishing and bookselling business on Cornhill, Boston. Thomas Hancock had formerly served as an apprentice in bookbinding with Henchman, but at the time of the founding of the paper mill he owned his own publishing and bookselling establishment on Ann Street, near the Draw Bridge. During his apprenticeship Hancock had married Henchman's daughter Lydia, and in this manner the two families were united. Thomas Hancock died in 1764, bequeathing the greater portion of his estate to his nephew, John Hancock (1737-93), who became governor of Massachusetts, but is now best remembered for his bold signature on the Declaration of Independence. Benjamin Faneuil was the father of Peter Faneuil (1700-43), who built classic Faneuil Hall and presented it to the town of Boston in 1742. Gillam Phillips was Peter Faneuil's brother-in-law. Henry Dering was probably the only associate in the paper mill who understood the rudiments of papermaking, and he was, therefore, chosen as superintendent of the mill, with Henry Woodman, an Englishman, acting as foreman. Daniel Henchman, the leader of the group, was aware that the success of a papermaking venture would rest upon the quantity of linen and cotton rags that would be available. Only a few days after the exclusive privilege to manufacture paper had been granted, Henchman was appealing for old rags in an advertisement, dated September 20, 1728, in the New-England. Weekly Journal, a news-
36
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
paper published in Boston by Samuel Kneeland and Timothy Green. This advertisement requested .. .all Persons who will be at the pains to save or procure Linnen Rags, and bring them to D. Henchman, Bookseller, at his Shop over against the Old Brick Meeting House in Cornhill, or to T. Hancock, Bookseller, at the Bible and Three Crowns in Ann Street; That they shall have paid them 3d. for every pound of fine white Linnen Rags, 2d. for every pound of Blue Speckled & course Linnen, and 3 half pence per Pound for Cotton and Linnen. T o fulfill the terms of the court agreement and to turn the monopoly of paper manufacture to a profit, the five members of the mill company leased a mill building along the Neponset River, then in the town of Dorchester, now Milton, about seven miles south of Boston: the mill structure had been built in 1717 by Joseph Belcher for use as a fulling mill. It was not until 1731 that specimens of paper were considered of sufficient perfection to present to the legislature, and the production of mediocre paper continued until 1737 when Henry Woodman severed his connection as foreman of the mill. Henry Dering, the superintendent, likewise relinquished his position to engage in more lucrative work. N o t to be disheartened, the remaining lay members of the group induced Jeremiah Smith, an Irishman living in Boston, to assume the responsibilities of mill superintendent; and to assist him, John Hazleton, a practical English papermaker, was engaged as foreman, with Abijah Smith, an American papermaker, as chief vatman. Through diligent work and careful management, Jeremiah Smith, although not a skilled papermaker, was eventually able to acquire the holdings of the four remaining sponsors of the original company and in 1741 to purchase the mill building from the heirs of Joseph Belcher. Ten years had elapsed since the first specimens of paper had been presented to the legislature, but owing to the difficulty in procuring skilled papermakers the mill had not prospered. The paper that was made was uneven and coarse and lacked the whiteness that was desired by the Boston printers, many of whom continued to use the English and Dutch paper that was so readily procurable through the extensive sailing-ship trade.
Massachusetts
'1128
37
Even without proficient workers, Jeremiah Smith persisted in operating the mill, although only at intervals and with no appreciable improvement in the quality of the paper. John Hazleton, the mill foreman, was in the British Army, but owing to the need for papermakers he had been given a furlough so that he might assist in producing paper. In 1759, however, Hazleton's regiment was ordered to service in General James Wolfe's Quebec Expedition, and he was compelled to give up his place in the paper mill and join his fellow soldiers. H e met his death in battle on the Plains of Abraham. Jeremiah Smith eventually retired from the paper mill, bet not until his son-in-law, James Boies (or Boyce), had been initiated into the craft of papermaking. In 1760, Boies induced Richard Clarke, an adept English papermaker, to accept the position formerly held by John Hazleton, and under Clarke's guidance the quality of the writing and printing paper was improved. A few years later James Boies and Richard Clarke formed a partnership with a plan to oontinue the making of paper, and in December 1763 these two men petitioned the Great and General Court of Massachusetts for the sum of four hundred pounds for the purpose of repairing the mill, a request that was granted. By the year 1776, according to the contemporary tract, the American Wonder, Or, the Strange and Remarkable Cape-Ann Dreaifi, there were four paper mills in Milton, with mills proposed for building in Newburyport and Sutton. From this time onward the papermaking trade in Massachusetts developed rapidly with a history so voluminous that it would not be feasible in this monograph to venture beyond the pioneer mills. A search in several of the foremost collections of Massachusetts imprints has been unsuccessful in discovering any watermarked papers that could definitely be identified as having had origin in the first mill established in the colony.
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&
*ν * * ν *
M A I N E · 1731-35
H E earliest paper mill in Maine was established between the years 1731 and 1735. The original plan for this mill had its beginning in 1730, when, after visiting the mill in Milton, Massachusetts, Samuel Waldo and Thomas Westbrook conceived the idea of building a paper mill near the lower falls of the Presumpscot River in the old town of Falmouth, Maine, where these two men held large tracts of land. Samuel Waldo was a man of wealth, formerly a merchant of Boston, who moved to Falmouth after acquiring title to thousands of acres of land in the district of Maine known as the "Waldo Patent." Thomas Westbrook was a farmer and landholder who had become associated with Waldo in real estate speculation, but he was later ruined through his association with his scheming partner. The establishment of the paper mill was undertaken by these two men more as a means of advancing their own interests than through any desire to found an industry that would be beneficial to the community. With the exception of Richard Clarke, who was operating the paper mill in Milton, Massachusetts, there were no skilled papermakers in New England. Samuel Waldo and Thomas Westbrook possessed the resources for the building and equipping of a paper mill, but they knew nothing about the complexities of forming sheets of usable paper. In 1731 Waldo left for England with the express purpose of locating a skilled papermaker who could be - 38-
Mane
·
1Ί31-35
39
induced to come to America to assume the responsibilities of superintending the newly conceived Maine mill. Through Waldo's enthusiastic descriptions of the advantages to be had in AngloAmerica, a young English papermaker named Richard Fry consented to relinquish his work in his native England and journey to America. A few months later, at his own expense, Richard Fry arrived in Boston prepared to commence operations in the paper mill that Samuel Waldo had promised would be completely built and equipped upon his arrival. Nothing has been recorded relative to the actual manufacture of paper in the pioneer Maine mill. The earliest definite word regarding Richard F r y after his arrival in New England is a brief notice to "save rags," followed by a lengthy advertisement in the same vein in the New England Weekly Journal, Boston, April 24, 1732. In this advertisement Fry listed himself as a "Stationer, Bookseller, Paper-Maker, Rag-Merchant, from the City of London," but he made no mention of having any connection with Samuel Waldo, Thomas Westbrook, or the Maine paper mill. T h e next news of Richard Fry's activities in New England appeared in the Boston News-Letter, for the issues of October 17 and November 8, 1734. Here again was an appeal for the saving of linen and cotton rags for papermaking. After the appearance of the advertisment of 1734, Richard Fry remained in obscurity until the years 1739 and 1740 when he was again heard from through several petitions he wrote while in the Boston Debtors' Prison. From one of these petitions we learn that Samuel Waldo and Thomas Westbrook had leased the Maine mill to Richard Fry for a term of twenty-one years at a yearly rental of sixty-four pounds sterling, payable each quarter. T h e two wealthy landlords, Waldo and Westbrook, had also agreed to build a frame dwelling near the mill for F r y and his family. Apparently the paper mill did not prove a financial success, or perhaps the promoters of the mill were unable to procure the needed linen and cotton rags, so essential in making paper; in any event, the rent was soon in arrears, and with the exception of the delivery to Boston of a number of reams of printing paper, Richard Fry's landlords appear not to have received any compensation from the lease of the Maine mill.
40
Papermaking in Pioneer America
Regardless of the unpaid rent, it is probable that Richard Fry continued to operate the mill until December 1736. Then followed litigation and law suits, with Richard Fry sentenced to Boston Prison for nonpayment of rent. During his confinement in prison Fry wrote a series of letters and petitions deploring the unhealthy condition of the prison and complaining about the severe and unjust treatment he had received through his connection with Samuel Waldo. Richard Fry's petitions penned from the Debtors' Prison leave no doubt but that he was a victim of Samuel Waldo's greed and avarice. He made it plain that he came to New England in 1731 at his own expense with the expectation of going to work immediately in a mill that Waldo had promised would be completed upon his arrival. The mill was not finished for several years thereafter, and Richard Fry was forced to support his family without help from Samuel Waldo, who had given Fry so much assurance prior to his departure for America. In a detailed petition dated June 22, 1739, written in prison, Richard Fry stated his own case in a straightforward manner, devoid of the bitterness and condemnation that might have been expected from an English workman who had apparently been misled and deceived by his American employer. The petitions and letters written by Richard Fry from the Boston Debtors' Prison constitute the only records that exist of the Maine paper mill. The Falmouth records of the period were destroyed by fire. At the time of his incarceration in the jail, Richard Fry had a wife, Martha, and a son, James Brook Fry, and a daughter; both children were born in New England. Richard Fry died in Boston in 1745, and in administering his estate, Martha Fry, his widow, described herself as a "papermaker," so it may be inferred that the family continued the trade after Richard Fry was released from the Boston Debtors' Prison. No watermarks from the first paper mill in Maine have been identified, although the personal papers of Samuel Waldo, dating from 1731 to 1750, have been examined with the hope of finding markings of some nature. For the most part these papers had their origin in England and the Low Countries.
* J \ É V
U
SIAU
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VIRGINIA
· 1744
RIOR to going to Virginia to establish the first permanent printing office in the colony, William Parks, an Englishman, had lived in Annapolis, Maryland, where in 1727 he founded Maryland's first newspaper, the Maryland Gazette. The Virginia authorities had requested that William Parks open a printing shop in Williamsburg and in 1730 he executed the first acceptable printing in Virginia. In 1732 Parks was appointed public printer and four years later he established the Virginia Gazette, the earliest newspaper in the colony. The printing paper used by Parks was made in the mills of Pennsylvania or imported from England or the Low Countries, Benjamin Franklin, of Philadelphia, acting as paper merchant. William Parks and Benjamin Franklin were friends, with many business transactions between them. During this period the Philadelphia printer not only dealt in paper, but also furnished great quantities of linen and cotton rags to the mills. It is only necessary to cite one entry from Benjamin Franklin's account books to show his extensive dealings in old rags and finished paper: During the years 1735 to 1741, inclusive, Franklin sold to William and Gerard DeWees and to William DeWees, Junior, Pennsylvania papermakers, 55,476 pounds of rags at the rate of one and one-half pence a pound— purchases amounting to three hundred and forty-five pounds, thir-41 -
42
Papermaking in Pioneer America
teen shillings, and tenpence; in return the DeWees mill furnished Franklin with finished paper and pasteboard valued at eight hundred and thirty-two pounds, one shilling, and ninepence. These were great quantities of rags and paper and significant sums of money for a period when printing had found its way into only eight colonies, and paper mills had been established in only four colonies. As early as 1724, six years prior to the establishment of the first permanent printing office in Virginia, it was suggested that the craft of papermaking could be carried on with profit in the colony. A book embracing the "present state of Virginia" was written by the Reverend Hugh Jones and published in London in 1724. In this small volume there is a single paragraph, outlining the possibility of setting up paper mills in the colony, which reads: Paper-Mills I believe would answer well there; for there are good Runs of Water with Timber for nothing for building them, and I am sure the Negroes would supply them with Rags enough for Trifles; to which add the Advantage of Water Carriage; these need not interfere with the English Paper-Mills, but only supply us with such Quantities of Paper, as we buy from foreign Countries. Although Benjamin Franklin was no doubt profiting through the sale of paper to the William Parks printing office in Virginia, his interest in the establishment of paper mills throughout the pioneer country prompted him to comply with a request made by William Parks relative to assisting him in building a paper mill in Williamsburg. As the result of Parks's entreaty, Benjamin Franklin inserted an advertisement in his Philadelphia newspaper, the Pennsylvania Gazette, for the date of September 23, 1742, which reads: An honest and diligent Person, that is capable of building a good PaperMill, and another that understands the Making of Paper, are wanted to undertake and carry on that Business in a neighbouring Colony. Any such Persons that want Employment, will meet with a Person who will give good Encouragement, if they apply to the Printer of this Paper on the 25th Instant. This "help wanted" advertisement evidently brought the desired result, for a skilled German papermaker named Conrad Shütz
Virginia · Π44
43
(Sheets, Sheetz, or Schultz), living near Philadelphia, applied for the position. About two weeks following the appearance of the advertisement William Parks probably visited Philadelphia, as there is an entry in one of Benjamin Franklin's account books under the date of October 8, 1742, giving Parks credit "by cash left in my hands . . . 11-10-0." It was no doubt during this visit that William Parks first met and interviewed the papermaker, Conrad Shütz, and plans were made for him to proceed to Williamsburg. Before leaving, however, it mav be assumed that Shütz procured at least one other worker who was versed in mill construction, for in Franklin's accounts there are records of cash advances made to mechanics who were to journey to Virginia to build the mill. Under date of 1742 Franklin's accounts list: "cash paid Sheets 50 shillings which makes in all by Sheets wife, himself & carpenter for which I have taken Shültz's (Sheets') bond payable to Parks and Parks is Dr to me for the same . . . 33-10-0." Not long after the appearance of the notice in the Pennsylvania Gazette and the meeting with William Parks, the Shütz family and a millwright or carpenter arrived in the Colony of Virginia, and the building of the paper mill was commenced on a branch of Archer's Hope Creek in James City County, south of Williamsburg. The length of time Shütz and his workers remained in Virginia is not known, but the building and the equipping of a one-vat mill would have required at least two years of constant application. Apparently the entire mill building had to be erected, the water power provided, and the rougher appliances for the making and finishing of paper constructed from the material at hand. The more complicated parts were probably transported by sailing ship from Philadelphia, an industrial center where papermaking had been an established craft for more than half a century. In Benjamin Franklin's accounts of materials supplied to the Virginia paper mill there is an entry dated March 30, 1743, for "cooper's ware . . . 4 pounds, 4 shillings." This may have been a papermaker's vat or a sizing tub, so we may assume that at this date the mill building had been at least partially constructed and the equipment was being placed. In this same account there are entries for "hair lines and hair ropes," which
44
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
were, of course, the ropes upon which paper was hung to dry; also there is an entry for "2 doz. hair cloths . . . 1-16-0," which was a finely woven material used by the old papermakers in filtering water, a form of cleansing that would have proved entirely inadequate in extracting the impurities from the muddy water of Virginia streams. Between the years 1742 and 1745 Franklin delivered to William Parks "one pair moulds at 5 pounds"; Parks was also indebted to Franklin to the extent of twenty-six pounds "for cash paid mould-maker." From these entries it is certain that Franklin supplied the Virginia mill with moulds, the most important tool of the papermakers' craft. As early as March 30, 1743, it is recorded that Benjamin Franklin shipped 915 pounds of papermaking rags to William Parks, and during the years 1744 and 1745 the Virginia mill is charged with "1700 lbs. fine pick't rags at 4d; paid for picking and porterage 2-2-9; 3 hogsheads & packing 1-1-0." This shipment of rags was evidently of most superior quality, as Franklin's customary price was one and one-half pence a pound. Contemporary records show that rags were transported in hogsheads and not in bales, a custom that developed later. In all about ten thousand pounds of linen and cotton rags were furnished the Virginia paper mill by Benjamin Franklin's Philadelphia office. The carefully itemized ledgers and journals from Benjamin Franklin's establishment also show that Franklin forwarded substantial quantities of "English and Dutch milled board" to the Virginia mill. This was a glazed, hard-fiber material between sheets of which the writing paper, and some of the printing paper, was pressed after it had been dried and sized. Several entries in Franklin's account books also list animal skins that were used in sizing paper. These hides were boiled in water and the sheets of water-leaf paper dipped into the warm glutinous liquid residue, a process that rendered the paper impervious to fluid writing ink. W e may be reasonably certain that the Virginia mill was in operation and producing acceptable paper toward the close of the year 1744, as on September third of this year Benjamin Franklin credited William Parks with "paper left for me at Apoquinimy . . .
Virginia
· 1144
45
55-12-9." This paper was probably made in the Williamsburg mill by Conrad Shiitz, or by workers he had trained prior to his return to Pennsylvania where he later established his own paper mill on the Lower Merion. Conrad Shiitz died in 1771. An amusing poem stressing the customary "save rags" theme appeared in the July 26, 1744, issue of William Parks's newspaper, the Virginia Gazette. The sixty-four-line poem was signed " J . Dumbleton." A fairly complete file of the Virginia Gazette, including the unique copy of the newspaper containing this poem, formed a part of the private library belonging to Thomas Jefferson. This irreplaceable collection was sold to the Library of Congress in 1815, but unfortunately the newspapers were destroyed in the disastrous fire of December 24, 1851. No contemporary copy of the Dumbleton verses exists, and the poem has been preserved only because it was thoughtfully copied from the Virginia Gazette prior to the conflagration in the Washington Library. "The Paper Mill, Inscrib'd to Mr. Parks." In nova, fert Animis, mutates dicere formas, Corpora.—Ovid (Reprinted from the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, for the year ending June 1900, Volume VII, issued by the Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia.) Tho' sage Philosophers have said, Of nothing, can be nothing made: Yet much thy Mill, O Parks, brings forth From which we reckon nothing worth. Hail kind Machine!—The Muse shall praise Thy Labours, that receive her Lays. Soon as the Learn'd denounce the War From pratling Box, or wrangling Bar, Straight, Pen and Paper range the Fight; They meet, they close, in Black & White. The Substances of what we think, Tho' born in Thought, must live in Ink. Whilst willing Menfry lends her Aid, She finds herself by Time betray'd. Nor can thy Name, Dear Molly, live Without those Helps the Mill must give; The Sheet now hastens to declare,
Papermakrng in Pioneer America How lovely Thou, and—my Despair, Unwitting Youths, whose Eyes or Breast, Involve in Sighs, and spoil of Rest; Unskill'd to say their piteous Case, But miss the Girl for want of Brass, May paint their Anguish on the Sheet; For Paper cannot blush, I weet. And Phillis (for Bissextile Year Does only once in Four appear, When Maids, in dread to lie alone Have Leave to bid the men come on). Each Day may write to lure the Youth She longs to wed, or fool, or—both. Ye Brave, whose Deeds shall vie with Time, Whilst Mill can turn, or Poet rhime Your Tatters hoard for future Quires; So Need demands, so Parks desires. (And long that gen'rous Patriot live Who for soft Rags, hard Cash will give! ) The Shirt, Cravat, the Cap, again Shall meet your Hands, with Mails from Spai?i; The Surplice, which, when whole or new, With Pride the Sexton's Wife could view, Tho' worn by Time and gone to rack, It quits its Rev'rend Master's Back; The same again the Priest may see Bound up in Sacred Liturgy. Ye Fair, renown'd in Cupid's Field, Who fain would tell what Hearts you've killed; Each Shift decay'd, lay by with Care; Or Apron rubb'd to bits at—Pray'r, One Shift ten Sonnets may contain, T o gild your Charms, and make you vain; One Cap, a Billet-doux may shape, As full of Whim, as when a Cap, And modest 'Kerchiefs Sacred held May sing the Breasts they once concealed. Nice Delia's Smock, which, neat and whole, No Man durst finger for his Soul; Turn'd to Gazette, now all the Town, May take it up, or smooth it down. Whilst Delia may with it dispence,
Virginia · 1144
47
And no Affront to Innocence. T h e Bards, besure, their Aids will lend; T h e Printer is the Poet's Friend; Both cram the News, and stuff the Mills. F o r Bards have Rags, and—little else. Your humble Servant, J. Dumbleton.
Research in the history of American papermaking proves almost conclusively that the Colony of Virginia was the second locality to make use of watermarks. It is barely possible, however, that papermarks were used by the earliest mills of New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Maine, and examples may yet be discovered in the paper of contemporary manuscripts, books, and broadsides. The William Parks watermarks that have been recorded may be classified into two general groups: variations of the old Arms of Virginia and the initials " W P " surmounted by a crown. In our search, the earliest Virginia watermarks to be examined appear in the paper used in printing the Virginia Gazette, Containing the freshest Ad-
vices, Foreign and Domestici?, From Thursday August 28, to Thursday September 4, 1146, Numb. 521. The Arms of Virginia watermark found in the paper used in printing this newspaper is practically the same in design as the emblem shown in Figure 7, but it lacks the flowing ribbon adorned with lettering in Latin. The " W P " initials accompanying the Virginia Arms in the 1746 watermark are contained within a leaf cluster, perhaps intended to represent the tobacco plant, surmounted by a regal crown, all enclosed within a circle. The Virginia watermarks that are reproduced (Figures 6 and 7) were taken from the paper used by Christopher Sower in printing the German Bible, published in Germantown, Pennsylvania, in 1763. It may be asked why Virginia-made paper was used for book printing in Pennsylvania, where paper had been produced since the late seventeenth century. The Virginia mill was probably able to manufacture a greater amount of paper than could be consumed within the colony, and it was profitable to dispose of the surplus reams in other localities. Even a one-vat mill would have been able to make more paper than could have been used in
48
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
the printing shop of William Parks. Although the Virginia printing office was publishing the Virginia Gazette, it was a weekly newspaper and circulations at the time were limited; printing paper was urgently needed, but it was not abundantly or extravagantly used as in later periods. It has been suggested that perhaps the Virginia moulds may have been taken to Pennsylvania and used there for making paper without troubling to remove the watermarking wires, a supposition not entirely devoid of foundation. From an examination of the paper used in printing the Sower German Bible of 1763, however, it is my opinion that the paper was made in Virginia, probably a number of years prior to the printing of the Germantown Bible. There is no record of the year the Williamsburg mill ceased operations, but it may be assumed that William Parks continued the making of paper in the Virginia mill for at least five years, inasmuch as a "save rags" advertisement appeared in his publication, the Virginia Almanack, For the Year of our Lord God, 1149. In this notice it is stated that "this is the first Mill of the Kind that ever was erected in this Colony.. . . " William Parks died at sea on the first day of April 1750 while journeying to his native England. His remains were carried to England on the trading ship and interred in Gosport, Hampshire. In the records of York County, Virginia, for 1752, it is stated that the paper mill was sold after his death, but no mention was made of the purchaser. After William Parks's death the Virginia Gazette suspended publication for a few months, but on January 3, 1751, the weekly newspaper was revived by William Hunter, the journeyman printer who had worked for Parks in his Williamsburg printing shop. H e also succeeded his old associate in the office of public printer. There is no reliable evidence supporting the suggestion that William Hunter continued the Virginia paper mill after the death of William Parks; old account books show that Hunter made numerous purchases of printing paper from Benjamin Franklin's thriving Philadelphia establishment. William Hunter died August 12, 1761, and the old journals and ledgers throw considerable light on Franklin's transactions with the Parks and the Hunter
Virginia · 1744
49
estates. On March 3, 1757, Benjamin Franklin's accounts list: " f o r ballance of W m . Parks's acc't . . . 113-10-8." This balance had remained due to Benjamin Franklin from William Parks and his estate since July 20, 1749. Also in one of Franklin's account books there is the following significant memorandum: "June 1, 1763, when I was lately down in Virginia, the above acc't was adjusted [ b y ] Mr. Hunter's Executors, all but the articles of paper, & the ballance of Parks's acc't which is lost. B. Franklin." It is evident from this entry that Franklin dismissed all thought of collecting the balance due him from the estate of William Parks. After the death of William Hunter in 1761, the work of the Virginia printing office was eventually carried on by his son William, who with John Dixon assumed publication of the Virginia Gazette, beginning with the issue of January 7, 1775. It is possible that William Hunter, Junior, reestablished the William Parks paper mill, or he may have built another mill near the same locality. An advertisement in the Virginia Almanack, for the year 1776, printed and sold by Dixon and Hunter, appealed to the readers to save "clean linen rags, fine or coarse," and further stated: Their design is to erect a mill for manufacturing of paper, and hope through the care and favour of the public, that the establishment of so useful a work in this colony will meet with due encouragement. It will be necessary that a sufficient stock of rags be laid in by the spring, as the business is intended to commence about that time. All persons who can contribute in this manner towards the undertaking will please to send their rags immediately. T h e result of this undertaking is not known and the only record of it is in the advertisement in the almanac of 1776.
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CONNECTICUT
• 1766
HE earliest paper mill in Connecticut had its origin in 1766 when Christopher Leffingwell, a thirty-two-yearold native of Norwich, established a mill on the Yantic River near Noman's Acre in the town where he had been born. Leffingwell had been engaged in the trade of weaving wool and cotton stockings and had gained a reputation in the community as a manufacturer. He was also a successful merchant and like all patriotic men of the time he was an active member of the militia, being a colonel in the infantry. There was need for a paper mill in Connecticut. The craft of printing had been introduced into the colony as early as 1709 when Thomas Short of Boston established his shop in New London; James Barker in 1755 began the publication in New Haven of Connecticut's first newspaper, the Connecticut Gazette. In this colony, as in all others, there was an urgent demand for writing and printing paper, and Christopher Leffingwell decided to turn his knowledge of mechanics and trade to the manufacture of this essential commodity. The earliest recorded use of paper from the Leffingwell mill was in printing the December 12, 1766, issue of the New-London Gazette, a four-page weekly newspaper that was founded by Timothy Green in 1763. This statement is determined by the following notice on the third page of the Gazette of this date: -55-
56
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
The Paper on which this Gazette is Printed, ivas manufactured, at Norwich,—A Proof that this Colony can furnish itself with One very considerable Article, which has heretofore carried Thousands of Pounds out of it. This should excite every lover of his Country, to promote as much as Possible, this laudable Undertaking, by saving all their linnen Rags. Aside from advising the public of the use of locally made paper, the notice advertised the forthcoming publication of the Connecticut Almanack, For the Year of Our Lord Christ, 1767. This almanac, also from the press of Timothy Green, was issued late in 1766 and embraces twenty-four unnumbered pages including the covers, all printed on paper of an indifferent brown tone. Inasmuch as it is stated in the almanac that "The Paper on which this Almanack is Printed, was manufactured in this Colony," we are certain that the Leffingwell paper mill was making fairly large quantities of usable printing paper toward the close of the year 1766. In a private letter, dated October 1767, the observant writer expressed admiration for the newly established mill in this manner: "The Paper-Mill at Norwich is plentifully supplied with rags, and has full demand for the paper . . . . they mould and make ready for the Press about ten sheets per minute by the watch." Had this rate of production been constant, which is most improbable, the amount of paper made each ten-hour working day would have been about twelve reams, an annual output of approximately thirty-six hundred reams. For the manufacture of this quantity of finished paper three vats would have been required, employing the attention of from fourteen to sixteen workers, all versed in the rudiments of papermaking. Regardless of the glowing report in the letter of 1767, it is doubtful if the annual production of the Leffingwell mill was more than one-fifth the amount indicated in the contemporary letter. During this early period of the American paper industry the finesse of the finished product, like the goodness of the printing, was of secondary consideration. It was the practice of the vatmen and couchers to labor longer hours and more rapidly than would be expected in a handmade-paper mill of the present day. Most of the printing paper made in the American mills during the
Connecticut
· 1166
57
eighteenth century is uneven in weight, lacking in uniformity, and of a darkish color. This latter condition is suggestive of hurried and careless treatment of the rags, and the use of impure, earthcharged water during the maceration of the material. The paper that was produced especially for writing purposes was manufactured in smaller quantities and with greater care; therefore, it is of a more durable quality and pleasing tone than the paper made solely for newspaper and pamphlet printing. Although Christopher Leffingwell's paper mill was well patronized by the printers and stationers of Connecticut, the undertaking did not prove to be a financial success, a condition that may have been due to the lack of skilled workmen or to the scarcity of the much-needed linen and cotton rags. In any event, the making of paper was considered of such value to the colony that on May 2, 1769, the Connecticut General Assembly proposed and granted a bounty of " T w o pence the Quire on all Good Writing Paper and One penny the Quire on all printing and Coarser Paper" that Leffingwell's Norwich mill could produce. There was no definite date set for the termination of the bounty, as it was twice stated in the agreement that it was "to be Continued During the Pleasure of the Assembly." In an account rendered by Christopher Leffingwell and dated Hartford, May 10, 1770, the paper mill made a claim for eighty-one pounds, sixteen shillings, and eightpence, the sum of bounty due on 4,020 quires of writing paper and 11,600 quires of printing and coarse paper. On June 6, 1770, Leffingwell gave a receipt for the complete payment of this claim. In the meantime, the General Assembly had withdrawn the bounty, as is evidenced by a document dated May 1770, which reads in part: "It is now Resolved by this Assembly that the payment of Said Bounty be discontinued for the future and said Grant is hereby repealed." In our investigations of the paper made in early Connecticut mills many watermarks from the Christopher Leffingwell establishment have been examined, covering the period from 1766, when the mill was founded, to the year 1801. Although the watermarks from Connecticut's first mill, with a single exception, appear in one general design, the formation of the wires is complicated, and the
58
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
slightly different renderings of the same emblem show a knowledge of proportion and symmetry seldom displayed in eighteenthcentury American papermarks. The watermarks of the Norwich mill of Christopher Leffingwell consist of the initials "C L" or "L C" in well-formed outline lettering in one half of the sheet of paper; in the other half of the sheet there appears the chief emblem embracing a two-line elliptical border enclosing the name "NORWICH," above which are the usual "C L" or "L C" initials; underneath the town name there is a conventionalized floral ornament, with a six-petaled flower in the center, flanked by curving branches (Figure 11). In a few instances the wires of the elliptical borders have been pressed at the sides causing them to form almost true circles. The earliest Connecticut watermark we have discovered is in a sheet of fine writing paper measuring twelve and five-eights by sixteen inches. This is an invoice of Elijah Huntington and is dated September 10, 1766. The presence of this dated document should be convincing evidence that the Leffingwell mill was making fine writing paper, as well as printing paper, during the last quarter of the year 1766. The only deviation from the bordered watermark that we have found is in a sheet of writing paper bearing simply the crudely executed letters "NORWICH," in conjunction with the "C L" initials. This particular sheet of paper is dated 1768. It is not known when Christopher Leffingwell gave up active duty in the paper mill, but a notice in the Connecticut Gazette, New London, September 29, 1775, calling for the apprehension of an eloping Indian boy, is evidence of his continuance as an active citizen of Norwich. In the Connecticut Gazette for April 11, 1777, there appeared an advertisement calling for "Journeymen PaperMakers," but the name of Christopher Leffingwell is noticeably absent. His name does appear, however, in connection with other Norwich commercial activities as late as 1790, after which time he relied upon his children to carry on his industrial activities; he was married three times and had three sons and nine daughters. Christopher Leffingwell passed on in Norwich on November 7, 1810, at the age of seventy-six.
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N O R T H CAROLINA
1777
RIOR to the establishment of the first paper mill in North Carolina, the art of printing had been practiced in the colony for more than a quarter-century. James Davis, a journeyman printer, who had been an apprentice in William Parks's Williamsburg printing office, traveled by wagon to New Bern, North Carolina, in the year 1749, and there set up the earliest printing shop in the colony. Two years later, Davis established the colony's first newspaper, the North-Carolina Gazette. In 1764, Andrew Steuart, a Philadelphia^ undertook the operation of the second printing house in North Carolina, in the settlement of Wilmington. There was pressing need for paper in North Carolina and the local authorities offered a substantial monetary inducement to any industrious worker who would build and operate a paper mill. On September 10, 1775, the North Carolina Provincial Congress passed a resolution stipulating: That a Premium of 250 1. be given to the first Person who shall erect and build a Mill for manufactoring of brown, whited brown, and good writing Paper, and which Mill shall be actually set to work, and 30 Reams of brown, 30 Reams of whited brown, and 30 Reams of writing Paper, at least, be produced to the Provincial Council, and approved of by the said Council, within eighteen Months from this time; the brown Paper to be of equal Goodness to brown Paper imported from -70-
North Carolina · i 7 7 7
71
Great Britain of the price of 2s. 6d. Sterling per Ream, the whited brown equal in Goodness to whited brown Paper imported at the price of 3s. Sterling per Ream, and writing Paper equal in Goodness as aforesaid to 8s. Sterling per Ream. As specified in the document the premium offered by the Provincial Congress was not to be paid until eighteen months following the date of the resolution, and then only on condition that the quality of the paper was equal to the several sorts imported from Great Britain. More than two years elapsed before John Hulgan, a papermaker from Pennsylvania, presented a petition, dated December 20, 1777, in which he stated that he had ". . . erected a work near Hillsborough for carrying on the said Business," and asked for an extension of eight months so that he might comply with the terms set down in the resolution of 1775. The text of John Hulgan's petition reads: To the Honorable the General Assembly of North Carolina. The Petition of John Hulgan, Humbly Sheweth, That your Petitioner has learned the Business of papermaking in Europe, and has long been employed therein in the best paper mills in the State of Pennsylvania. Having heard of the Resolution of this State for encouraging by a Premium the making of paper your Petitioner came hither, and with the association of some Gentlemen has erected a work near Hillsborough for carrying on the said Business. But notwithstanding he used his utmost endeavour such was the difficulty of procuring Workmen that he could not get the same completed before the dry season of the last Summer came on, and entirely prevented your Petitioner from going on with his said Business, wherefore he has not been able to produce the quantity of paper within the time required to entitle him to the Premium. Your Petitioner therefore humbly prays that the Honorable the Assembly will declare that he shall be entitled to such Premium on producing to the Governor and Council within eight months a certificate of his having made the quantity of paper, and the quality required by the Resolve of the Council held at Hillsborough, and your Petitioner shall pray. John Hulgan. Because of continued dry weather, John Hulgan still found it impossible to comply with the governmental demand for a quantity of brown, whited brown, and writing paper. The members of the House of Commons realized the hardships Hulgan was undergoing
72
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
and on August 19, 1778, the time was extended until "the 1st Day of February," presumably of the following year, 1779. John Hulgan, along with other early American papermakers, experienced difficulty in procuring linen and cotton rags, as is evidenced by an appealing advertisement in the November 14, 1777, issue of the North-Carolina Gazette which follows in part: By our unhappy contest with Great Britain, and the necessary Restrictions on our Trade, Paper has been an Article for which we, in this State, have much suffered, for though there are many Paper Mills in the Northern Colonies, where Paper is made in great Perfection, yet, by the Interruption of the Colony Trade by Water, the Southern Colonies have experienced a very great Scarcity of that necessary Article. To remedy this Evil, and throw in their Mite toward the Perfection of American Manufactures, the Proprietors of a Paper Mill just erected near Hillsborough, in Orange County, give Notice to the Public, that their Mill is now ready to work, if a sufficient Quantity of Rags can be had, they will be able to supply this State with all Sorts of Paper . . . and when the Young Ladies are assured, that by sending to the Paper Mill an old Handkerchief, no longer fit to cover their snowy Breasts, there is a Possibility of its returning to them again in the more pleasing Form of a Billet Deaux from their Lovers, the Proprietors flatter themselves with great Success. Although the paper mill of John Hulgan in Hillsborough was the earliest in the Colony of North Carolina, the second mill was of more permanence and of wider influence. In 1736 a paper mill had been established on Cocalico Creek, near Ephrata, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, by the Seventh-Day German Baptist Brotherhood, a religious group that had been founded in 1708 in Wittgenstein, Germany. This was the first paper mill in America to be established by a religious organization for the purpose of manufacturing paper for use in their ecclesiastical printing. The second paper mill in North Carolina was likewise founded by a group of religious zealots. During the latter part of the eighteenth century a Moravian Bishop led a small aggregation of followers to North Carolina and founded a center of Christian life and service. The Moravians went to North Carolina from Saxony by way of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. T o the southern colony these cultured people brought art,
North
Carolina · 1777
73
music, medicine, law, architecture, and native craftsmanship. In 1766 the building of the "central town" was commenced and it was called "Salem," meaning peace. T h e Moravian settlers soon found that paper was a needed commodity for use in printing the teachings of their Christian faith, and in 1789 there appeared the earliest printed notice regarding the proposed plan of the Moravians for building a paper mill. This was one of the familiar "save rags" advertisements, in the September 14, 1789, issue of the Fayetteville Gazette, a weekly newspaper that had been founded the previous month. T h e advertisement was signed by "Gotlieb Shober," a staunch member of the Moravian Brotherhood. Although the original advertisement is dated September 8, 1789, no copy of this issue exists, but the same advertisement appeared in the following week's issue, dated September 14, 1789. A fragmentary history of North Carolina's second paper mill is recorded in a contemporary diary written in German script by the Salem minister of the Moravian Church. T h e first entry in the diary in which papermaking is mentioned bears the date Tuesday, September 8, 1789, and reads in translation: " W i t h the approval of the Aeltesten Conferenz and the Aufseher Collegium, Br. Gottlieb Schober plans to undertake the building of a Paper mill, and to employ Br. Christian Stauber as Papermaker. T h e latter left today to visit Pennsylvania, to learn papermaking in Ephrata. . . ." It is significant that Christian Stauber selected Ephrata as a suitable locality to learn the craft of papermaking. T h e Moravians of North Carolina were in close communication with the Moravians of Pennsylvania, and it was natural that the paper mill of the Ephrata Brotherhood was chosen as the most congenial and harmonious place for a devout artisan to perfect himself in the trade of making paper. Insofar as religious belief was concerned, however, the Seventh-Day Baptists of Pennsylvania had little in common with the United Brethren of North Carolina. The next reference in the "Minutes of the Aeltesten Conferenz, 1789," relating to the proposed paper mill is dated Wednesday, November 11, and translated reads: " W h e n the minutes of the Aufseher Collegium were read it was noted that to further the plan
74
Papermaking in Pioneer America
of Br. Schober to build a Paper mill it was necessary that Br. Johannes Krause should journey to Pennsylvania as soon as possible in order to see what would be necessary, for Br. Christian Stauber has written that he did not think he could undertake the work in the Paper mill without the help of some one who better understood such things." The entry following in the Moravian diary, for Saturday, November 14, 1789, mentions the desire for a loan to be used in erecting the paper mill. The paragraph says: "Br. Schober asked the Assembly for a loan from the State of 300 Pounds paper money for three years, without interest, to further his plan for building a Paper mill, and the loan was granted." With the loan forthcoming, the plan for building the mill progressed, and an entry in the diary, dated Tuesday, February 16, 1790, mentioned the power needed for driving the mill. A translation of this paragraph follows: "With a millwright's help, Br. Schober has measured the fall of Peters creek and has found that a breastwheel could be built. This would require a large milldam, which would put under water the meadow land over the line of the Single Brethren, and probably to the second run as water constantly spreads." The next entry in the diary of papermaking interest is dated Thursday, April (?) 22, 1790, and a translation reads: "Br. Christian Stauber, who has been in Pennsylvania since last autumn to learn the papermaking trade, returned from there." Christian Stauber had been in Pennsylvania since September 8, 1789, a period of over eight months. It may be assumed that in this time he had gained at least a rudimentary knowledge of papermaking, and he proceeded to carry on experimental operation of the mill that had been constructed by members of the Moravian Brotherhood, with Gottlieb Schober as director. The first reference in the diary to the actual making of paper in the mill is dated Friday, April 29, 1791, over a year and a half following conception of the plan, when Christian Stauber left for Ephrata to learn the craft of papermaking. This entry in the diary reads: "Br. Phil. Transu. Sen., and his wife and their daughter Catharina moved to Salem, where they will live at the Paper mill, which by the end of the week will be so far completed that blotting paper can be made." On June 30, 1791, it was
North Carolina · 2777
75
recorded that both writing and printing paper were being made. From the foregoing excerpts from the old Moravian diary it is certain that the Salem, North Carolina, mill was making usable paper by the middle of the year 1791. The paper upon which the 1790 section of the diary is written bears the watermark "P ULRICK" and was doubtless made in Pennsylvania by Peter Ulrick (or Ulrich), a former member of the Ephrata Brotherhood. The paper used in inscribing the 1792 section of the manuscript was made in the North Carolina Moravian mill of Gottlieb Schober and Christian Stauber. This paper is watermarked with the single letter "S" in the customary outline form, the letter measuring approximately nine-sixteenths of an inch in height. The quality of the North Carolina paper made by the Moravian Brotherhood is equal to that of any paper manufactured in America during the latter part of the eighteenth century. The Salem mill was in operation as late as 1806, but from this date onward all record is lost. Gottlieb Schober died in Salem in 1838.
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NEW H A M P S H I R E & V E R M O N T 1777-93
H E history of papermaking in the neighboring sVates of N e w Hampshire and Vermont, as in most other American localities, is authentically told in contemporary manuscripts, almanacs, and newspaper advertisements. There is little reason to leave anything in doubt, insofar as names and dates are concerned; search in county archives and in early newspaper files also reveals the numerous hardships that were overcome by the pioneer papermakers. T h e constant appeal to the public to save linen and cotton rags was ever present, even prior to the erection of a paper mill. In almost every locality the art of printing preceded the craft of papermaking, and because of the difficulties of transportation the small printing offices experienced no end of trouble in procuring paper, even though the source of supply was no more than a hundred miles distant. Owing to the lack of paper the publication of newspapers was often delayed, and there have been many instances in eighteenth-century and early nineteenth-century American journalism where the issuing of newspapers had to be omitted for weeks at a time because of the impossibility of procuring the needed printing paper. There was urgent need for the printed word in pioneer times, but the printer was helpless without the papermaker. - 76 -
New
Hampshire
& Vermont
· 1ΠΊ-93
77
T h e earliest printing office in N e w Hampshire was established in 1756 by Daniel Fowle who had previously carried on this trade in the Colony of Massachusetts. After moving to Portsmouth, N e w Hampshire, Daniel Fowle continued to use paper that h^d been manufactured in Massachusetts and Connecticut mills. Papermaking in N e w Hampshire had its beginning in 1777 when Richard Jordan, a papermaker from Milton, Massachusetts, petitioned the N e w Hampshire House of Representatives for a sum of money to enable him to erect a paper mill. O n November 24, 1777, Jordan's petition was acted upon and a committee was chosen. Four days later, November 28, 1777, the chairman of the committee signed a document proposing ". . . that this State lend the said Richard Jordan t w o hundred pounds for the term of two years, without interest, for an encouragement to carry on the Paper business within this State, his giving good security for the same. T h o ' provided, the Mill be not compleated within one year from this time he to pay lawful Interest from the time of receiving the Money, all which is humbly submitted. . . ." T h e signer of this document was Matthew Patten, a Scotch Presbyterian, who had settled in N e w Hampshire in 1736. In the Records of the New Hampshire Council it was recorded that two hundred pounds were granted to Richard Jordan ". . . for an Encouragement to carry on the paper Manufacture in Exeter on certain Terms set forth therein, brot up . . . and Concur'd." In 1775 Robert Fowle, nephew of Daniel Fowle, founded a printing shop in Exeter, and a year later he established the New Hampshire Gazette, or, the Exeter Morning Chronicle, a newspaper that terminated publication in 1777. Robert Fowle was suspected as a T o r y and, being accused in the counterfeiting of paper money, he was forced to flee from Exeter; the newspaper was continued b y Daniel Fowle. There was need for a paper mill in the community and the Exeter establishment was in operation by the autumn of 1778, as on November 9 of that year Richard Jordan, papermaker, petitioned the N e w Hampshire House of Representatives for help in procuring rags for making paper. In this document Jordan mentioned the great expense and difficulty that had been incurred in collecting rags, and stressed the necessity of having to procure rags
78
Papermaking
in Pioneer
America
from other states. T h e august members of the House of Representatives, n o doubt mindful of the need for rags in papermaking, hurriedly replied to Jordan's petition in a "Resolve about Rags for the Paper Mill" dated November 11, 1778, which stated: Whereas this State cannot be supplied with a sufficient quantity of paper for its own consumption, without the particular care of its inhabitants in saving raggs for the paper mill. Therefore—Resolved that the Selectmen or Committees of Safety of the several Towns and places in this State be and they hereby are required imediately to appoint some suitable Person in their respective Towns and places (where it is not already done) to receive raggs for the paper mill under the direction of Richard Jordan of Exeter who is to pay for the same, and the Inhabitants of this State are hereby desired to be very carefull in saving even the smallest quantity of raggs proper for making paper, which will be a further evidence of their disposition to promote the Public Good.
Throughout the history of early American papermaking, there was exigent need for rags, and the call for cast-off linen and cotton material appeared constantly in the local press and in public documents. A "save rags" advertisement in the August 9, 1779, issue of the Dresden Mercury, and the Universal Intelligencer, Hanover, New Hampshire, was no doubt inserted in the hope of procuring material for the Richard Jordan paper mill in Exeter. Until the discovery of the Jordan petition of 1777, it had been thought that no paper had been made in New Hampshire prior to 1793, when a mill was established at Alstead by Ephraim and Elisha Kingsbury. The earliest printed reference to the Kingsbury mill appeared in an advertisement in the November 6, 1793, issue of the Columbian Informer; or Cheshire Journal, published in Keene. Six months later Elisha Kingsbury advertised in the same newspaper for "Two likely, active Boys, as apprentices to the Papermaking business, from 14 to 17 years of age." From the beginning of activities at Alstead, the Kingsbury paper mill, like Jordan's enterprise, experienced financial difficulties. On May 31, 1794, Elisha Kingsbury petitioned the House of Representatives for a loan of two hundred pounds. The petition reads in part:
New Hampshire & Vermont
· 1ΊΊΊ-93
79
That your Petitioner did in the year 1792 at great Expense build a Linseed Oil Mill, and in the year 1793, on his own Expense & on the same Dam build a Paper Mill, both which mills are nearly finished and do good business to the great advantage and benefit of the Public in this part of the State—That your Petitioner finds great demand for his Paper, not only in this, but in the neighbouring State of Vermont, so that not only the saving of importation of that valuable article is made, but likely to bring a considerable quantity of money into this part of the State. . . .
Early records reveal that the original Alstead paper-mill property consisted of one hundred and ten acres of land, fifty acres of which had been deeded by Absalom Kingsbury to Ephraim Kingsbury in 1789, and sixty acres to Elisha Kingsbury in 1790. In 1800 Elisha Kingsbury sold a fourth interest each to Bill Blake, David Buckman, and Isaac Randall; in 1806 Bill Blake acquired a half interest in the mill for one thousand dollars. Vermont's first paper mill was established at Fairhaven between the years 1790 and 1795 by Matthew Lyon, who in 1795 founded the Fairhaven Gazette; no copy of this issue has been saved. Matthew Lyon was born near Dublin, Ireland, July 14, 1750. At the age of fifteen he indentured himself to pay passage to America. On his arrival at the port of New York, the young man was assigned to Jabez Bacon, a merchant of Woodbury, Connecticut, who in turn disposed of the indenture to Hugh Hannah, of Litchfield, Connecticut. Some time later Hannah sold the indenture to one of the early settlers of Danville, Vermont, the payment being a pair of steers. In 1783, at the age of thirty-three, after reimbursing his benefactors for the passage money, Matthew Lyon settled in Fairhaven, Vermont, where he was successful in the operation of a sawmill, an iron foundry, and later a paper mill. Lyon was not a papermaker, but he was able to employ experienced workers, possibly from one of the mills in Milton, Massachusetts, a training ground for papermakers. Little is known relative to Matthew Lyon's venture in papermaking, although much has been written concerning his political life. In 1796 he was elected to Congress and two years later he again was voted into this office. Soon after the second
80
Papermaking in Pioneer America
election Lyon was indicted under the alien and sedition law for writing an article that reflected upon the character of President John Adams. Matthew Lyon was convicted and sentenced to four months' imprisonment; and a fine of one thousand dollars was also imposed. While in prison Lyon was elected to Congress for the third time, but his reputation in Vermont was suffering and he thought it prudent to move west, first to Kentucky and later to Arkansas. In some of the writings dealing primarily with Matthew Lyon's political career it is stated that he made use of the bark of the basswood tree for manufacturing paper. It has been claimed that he used basswood pulp in making the paper for the printing of his publication entitled the Scourge of Aristocracy, and Repository of important Political Truths, issued in Fairhaven, Vermont, from October 1 to December 15, 1798. The copies of this rare publication in the Henry E. Huntington Library, San Marino, California, have been examined by the Curator of Rare Books, and his comments regarding the paper follow: "The paper seems to be thicker and more porous than most paper of the time. It is browned badly, but not more so than some rag paper of the period. There are pieces of wood fiber in several places. It could easily be a locally-made wood-pulp paper." The paper in question has not been scientifically examined and owing to the rarity of the publication it is not likely that a specimen of the paper will be spared for this purpose. It is possible that Matthew Lyon made paper from wood, or from a mixture of wood fiber and the regulation linen and cotton rags, as early as 1798. Between 1765 and 1771, Dr. Jacob Christian Schaeffer had made small specimens of paper from various kinds of wood mixed with linen and cotton. If Matthew Lyon did succeed in fabricating paper from basswood, he no doubt was influenced by Dr. Schaeffer's experiments that were carried on in Regensburg, Germany. Apparently Matthew Lyon used no watermarks in the paper made in his Vermont mill; at least none have been found that could be definitely identified as having been made by him.
New Hampshire & Vermont · 11ΊΊ-93
81
Matthew Lyon died in Spadra Bluff, Arkansas, August 1, 1822, at the age of seventy-two years. In 1833 his remains were removed to his former home in Eddyville, Lyon County, Kentucky, a town and county he had founded in Western Kentucky after giving up his paper mill as well as his turbulent political career in the State of Vermont.
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· 1793
>OHN BRADFORD'S newspaper, the Kentucke Gazette, for September 1, 1787, contained an advertisement inserted by Jacob Myers that reads: Lincoln, August 15, 1787. The subscriber begs leave to inform the Public that he is now engaged in erecting a Paper Mill, on a branch of Dick's river near his grist mill, and expects to have it fully completed by the first of November next. . . . From the text of this advertisement it could be inferred that Jacob Myers established the earliest paper mill in Kentucky and was the first paper manufacturer west of the mountains. Although Jacob Myers states definitely "that he is now engaged in erecting a Paper Mill," it is most unlikely that Jacob Myers built a paper mill in Kentucky, or that paper was made within the state prior to the year 1793. Jacob Myers arrived in Kentucky from Philadelphia in 1780 and became a large land and property owner, but apparently he had no hand in pioneer papermaking in Kentucky. The earliest printed mention of a Kentucky mill where paper was actually produced appeared in the Kentucky Gazette in the issue of April 7, 1792, and several following numbers. This advertisement, signed by "Craig, Parkers & Co.," reads: The Subscribers inform the Public, that they have undertaken the building a PAPER MILL, at Craig's Fulling Mill, Woodford Countv. - 87 -
88
Papermaking in Pioneer America
They flatter themselves they will be able to supply the District with Paper the ensuing Winter, if the Public will be so obliging to save their Rags for that purpose, without which (we need not inform them) the Mill will be useless. We therefore earnestly request the considerate part of the people, to encourage so useful a branch of business, to encourage the less thoughtful part, (servants, 8cc.) to save them; and that as soon as possible, proper plans will be adopted for collecting them, and a generous price given. The Craig, Parkers and Company mill was erected in Georgetown, in what is now Scott County, and it was in operation in the spring of 1793; an advertisement in the March 30, 1793, issue of the Kentucky Gazette states that "Craig, Parkers & Co's. Paper Manufactory, Is now actually making paper, and we make no doubt but that in the course of this spring, we shall be able to furnish this state in all kinds of paper. . . ." The chief partner in the earliest Kentucky papermaking firm was Elijah Craig, a Baptist minister from Virginia who was prospering in Kentucky through the operation of his own distillery, a fulling mill, a tavern, and a store, all enterprises that preceded the paper-mill venture. The other partners in the paper mill were the Parkers, probably James and Alexander Parker, Lexington merchants. T h e actual making of the paper was performed by skilled artisans who had learned their trade in the older-established mills in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. Elijah Craig was a fervent preacher and a distiller of potent Kentucky liquor; the Parkers bought and sold "bearskins, dry hides, and butter," but neither Elder Craig nor the tradesmen Parkers were versed in the papermaking craft. No records remain of the papermakers who worked in the Georgetown mill during the early years of its development, but preserved specimens of the paper attest that it was fashioned by skilled hands. Ebenezer Stedman, who was bom in Massachusetts in 1776, was the first member of this family of noted papermakers to undertake the perilous journey to Kentucky. Stedman left Massachusetts in the spring of 1815 and arrived in Kentucky after an overland journey to Fort Pitt, then by flatboat to Limestone, on the Ohio, the usual port of entrance for settlers taking residence in Kentucky. Ebenezer Stedman's son, Ebenezer Hiram Stedman, who was born
Kentucky · 1793
89
in Dorchester, Massachusetts, in 1808, joined his father in Kentucky in 1816, and there learned the various branches of the papermaking craft. Young Stedman compiled an intimate diary that is the most comprehensive description of early nineteenth-century American papermaking technique that has been preserved. T h e original manuscript of this compilation is now in the collection of the Paper Museum of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Writing in the early seventies, Ebenezer Hiram Stedman recorded his remembrance of the old Georgetown paper mill as it appeared about the year 1818, only a quarter-century after it had been founded by Craig, Parkers and Company. Stedman set down his observations in this manner: " H o w plain I can this day see every room and window, and almost count the shingles on the roof; there was not a cut nail used in the building, every shingle was fastened with oak pins." T h e mill structure was approximately forty bv sixty feet in size, the basement was built of rough stones, with two and a half stories above of solid wood construction. T h e flow of water used by the mill was the Royal Spring, a remarkable fountain of pure water that ran over limestone; the stone dam was built in 1789. Although Stedman's diary was written during a several-year period (and at times it is disjointed and obscure), it is certain that he worked as a papermaker in the original Kentucky mill building in Georgetown, after it had been abandoned by Craig and the Parkers. Stedman's description of his encounter with dire poverty and lack of adequate papermaking equipment gives a picture of pioneer American papermaking that is in sharp contrast with the prosperous and efficient paper industry of the present day. It was only through the hardships and struggles of the early American papermakers that the pioneer printing offices were supplied with paper and were able to publish the weekly newspapers, tracts, pamphlets, and books that formed the foundation of American education and development. In the industrial achievement of the present day with the efficient manufacture of vast quantities of cheap paper for ephemeral purposes, we are inclined to lose sight of the privation and arduous labor that went hand in hand with the beginning of American industry. Ebenezer Hiram Stedman, reflecting upon his
90
Papermaking in Pioneer America
work as a young papermaker in the abandoned Georgetown mill, compiled a commentary of trials and adversity that gives an insight into the life of an early nineteenth-century papermill worker in the primitive country beyond the mountains. A further excerpt from Stedman's diary reads: In this old mill I was to make my start in life and in business, without money and without friends. I fastened the windows and doors of the mill building; the rooms were dark and musty. Where thousands of pounds of rags once laid there were a few scattered bits of cotton and hemp tow. The rag engine and vats were dry and rotting. There was a stronger power than I possessed to urge me to try to make something out of nothing. If I had the moulds and felts I could commence; I was anxious to make a start. I found an old pair of moulds that were so worn they had been set aside, but they were empty moulds, like my pockets, with no wires on them, just the wooden frames. I went home and told mother that I had found an old pair of paper-moulds in the mill; she gave me encouragement, and told me to take the dollar and a half that I possessed to Lexington and try to buy some wire, and father would lay the wires on the mould-frames. The next day I walked to Lexington and bought from Norman Porter the first material for the mill—brass wire. Father was a good workman at weaving on the wire. I cut old wool bed blankets into felts for couching the paper. That day I picked up all the old rags and hemp that had been left in the mill, and it took every particle of stock to make my first ream of paper. The mill wheels, except the water wheel, were worn out, but I patched them by putting in some new wood cogs. In a week's time I had the mill pumping water, but the engines and stuff-chest standing so long empty, leaked out the water as fast as I could pump it in, but in a few days I had them tight.. . . The rags that had been picked from the floor of the mill, and from between the beams where the rats had carried them for nests, made the first lot of paper, which was sold in Georgetown for one dollar and fifty cents a ream in trade for groceries. I could buy tow and rags with the orders on the grocery as every farmer raised hemp, and the Negroes who broke the hemp were entided to tow which they sold for fifty cents a hundred pounds. I now had a start of a thousand pounds of hemp tow & in the course of two weeks I had enough stock to keep the mill running on one engine. I employed Charles Prentis, John Stedman, and my father. John was lay-boy, and in a few weeks I hired Luther Prentis to cut tow on a wooden block. I now began to make five reams of paper each day. · . .
Kentucky
· 1193
91
In another section of Stedman's exhaustive manuscript he recorded an interesting sidelight on the making of money paper for the State of Kentucky, but it is not possible to determine the precise dare of this entry, which reads: . . . as soon as the water rose we began making paper; there was the contract to make the bank paper for the State to print the Commonwealth currency on, and this was the most particular work I ever had to do. The sheets of paper were made entirely of linen rags, and they were so thin the making was difficult, but I handled every sheet of that paper the State issued for money that required two dollars to buy one silver dollar. . . . The winter was so cold and many nights I hung the newly-made paper on the drying-poles so that it would freeze and add to the whiteness of the finished paper. . . .
Ebenezer Stedman's compilation contains minute details relative to the making of paper by hand, and describes the backward methods that prevailed in Kentucky and Ohio during the early years of the nineteenth century. His description of the Georgetown mill about the year 1820 would convey the impression that there were two "engines" for macerating the rags, and two wooden vats from which the sheets of paper were formed upon the moulds. The water supply was abundant, and even at the present time there is a tremendous flow of water. A few years ago when I visited the site of the Georgetown mill, not a vestige remained of the buildings; it could not even be determined where the stone foundations had originally stood; a dozen heavy stones, one upon another, at the side of the brook, may have been part of the old dam, built in 1789, but every other landmark of the first paper mill in Kentucky, and west of the mountains, had disappeared. The Georgetown paper mill of Craig, Parkers and Company used two watermarks. One of these was a crumpled outline in the form of a heart, within which were the initials "C & P" in outline lettering (Figure 16). The other watermark consisted of the crudely executed letters "C & P" in the left side of the sheet of paper, with a well-formed eagle made of heavy wire in the other side of the sheet of paper (Figures 17 and 18).
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WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA
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· 1796
ENNSYLVANIA has had a long and interesting history in papermaking: first, the Rittenhouse mill, founded by William and Nicholas Rittenhouse about 1690, followed by the William De Wees mill in 1710. In 1729 Thomas Willcox established Ivy Mills, and in 1736 a branch of the Pietists of Germany set up their paper mill near Ephrata. Eastern Pennsylvania, as has been noted, is richer in papermaking history than any other region in America, with the names and watermarks of scores of adept papermakers, including the dexterous Conrad Shiitz, who assisted Benjamin Franklin and William Parks in building the first paper mill in Virginia. Although the first paper mill in the West was built in Kentucky, the second mill to be erected beyond the mountains was located in Western Pennsylvania, and owing to the importance of this mill in the development of the "Western Country" it has been included in the present monograph. The Western Pennsylvania paper mill was established by two sturdy Quakers, Samuel Jackson and Jonathan Sharpless, who had crossed the mountains from their old homes in Chester County to their new settlement in Fayette County. Samuel Jackson, a millwright, arrived in Fayette County in 1777 and built a log cabin on a tract of land he had purchased at the mouth of Redstone Creek in -92 -
Western Pennsylvania · 1196
93
Jefferson Township. Following his trade of millwright he erected a sawmill, a gristmill, and an oil mill along the stream, and the water power was harnessed to move the cumbersome wood-cogged machinery he had constructed. By the year 1785, Jackson had amassed a sizable fortune and, in keeping with his position as a leader in the community, he planned and built a commodious stone house in the manner of Eastern Pennsylvania. In 1791, when Jonathan Sharpless was twenty-three years of age, he visited his brother-in-law, Solomon Phillips, whose home was on the banks of the Monongahela River opposite the mouth of Redstone Creek, not far from Samuel Jackson's water-power mills and stone mansion. Jonathan Sharpless was a skilled blacksmith, having served a seven-year apprenticeship in Chester County. Sharpless, like Jackson, was a staunch member of the Society of Friends. It was natural that these two artisans, each with unusual mechanical ability and a passion for their religious belief, should form a close companionship; also, inasmuch as both had been raised in Chester County they were reasonably familiar with the technicalities of the papermakers' craft, so advantageously carried on in the East. The discussions of these two mechanically minded men concerning the development of water power, machinery, and manufacturing eventually turned to the possibility of producing paper in Western Pennsylvania. They were aware that the paper used in the printing shops of the region was either laboriously transported overland from the eastern mills, or procured from the newly established mill in Kentucky; the success of one more paper mill in the western country seemed assured. The ultimate result of the friendship of Jackson, the millwright, and Sharpless, the blacksmith, led to the agreement that they would build a paper mill on Redstone Creek on land that had been acquired in 1777 by Samuel Jackson, the affluent member of the proposed partnership. It was arranged that young Jonathan Sharpless would return to his home in Chester County to undertake two vital accomplishments: to raise the sum of fifteen hundred dollars to finance his half-interest in the papermaking venture, and to gain a fundamental knowledge of paper
94
Papermaking in Pioneer America
manufacture, a trade expertly practiced in his home and neighboring counties. With no other means of acquiring money than through his own labor as a blacksmith, it was necessary for Sharpless to remain two years in Chester County before he had accumulated the funds required for half-interest in the contemplated Western Pennsylvania paper mill; in the meantime the young mechanic was learning the adroit skills of a papermaker. In 1793 Jonathan Sharpless, with the needed money in hand, left Chester County for his new home in Fayette County where the paper mill of Jackson and Sharpless was to be built and equipped. The following year saw the commencement of the construction of the buildings, on the site of an abandoned gristmill where remained only the rough stone walls of the old undershot water wheel. The new structure was about forty by seventy-five feet, three stories in height, with a half-story basement on the water side. The understanding between the two partners was that Jonathan Sharpless would manage the mill and produce the paper, and that Samuel Jackson would continue to operate his profitable gristmill, but at the same time assume financial responsibility for the papermaking concern. Sharpless and his family lived adjacent to the paper mill in a small house with a chimney roughly built of sticks and plaster. Near this unpretentious home he built a blacksmith shop where, with the help of two local workers, Nathan Mitchell and John Piersol, the equipment for the paper mill was constructed. The most ponderous machine required in the efficient operation of a handmade-paper mill was the press, and in the building of this cumbersome appliance Sharpless and his helpers used six iron screws, each five inches in diameter, and four feet, six inches in length. The power employed in cutting the threads of these screws was supplied by several work-horses actuating the lathe by being hitched to long wooden levers. Jonathan Sharpless was not a novice in cutting large, well-turned steel screws, for it is stated that while living in Chester County he made a huge coin press for the United States Mint in Philadelphia about the time this institution began operations. The present-day officials of the Mint, however, have failed to trace any account of a mechanical press that had
Western Pennsylvania -1196
95
been invented or built by Jonathan Sharpless; also, a search in the United States Patent Office records did not reveal a patent issued t o this mechanic for any type of pressure press. Although apparently no records remain to substantiate the assertion, it is possible that Sharpless did construct a successful press for the Philadelphia Mint, founded in 1792. T h e Jackson and Sharpless paper-mill building and a small tenement house for the workers were completed in 1796, and during the autumn months the water wheel was put into motion and the first experiments in actual papermaking were conducted. T h e earliest public announcement of the mill was a notice in the January 12, 1796, number of the Western Telegrapbe, and Washington Advertiser, Washington, Pennsylvania, which reads: W e are happy in being able to announce to the public with a considerable degree of confidence, that a PAPER MILL will shortly be erected on this side of the Mountains—that there is little doubt of its being completed by the ensuing fall. The Gentleman who undertakes it, is of an interprising disposition, and capable of going through with the business with spirit. The work, for which several preparations are already made, will be erected on a never-failing stream, in a thick settled part of the country, and close to navigation. The advantages accruing to our community from this addition to its manufactures will be very great, and it behooves every well-wisher to the community, to contribute his mite towards the supporting it. It cannot be carried on without a supply of rags:—Of these, every family can supply more or less; and there will be stores in every town, and various parts of the country ready to receive them. Every patriotic family then, will doubdess cause all their Rags to be preserved, and forwarded to some place where they are collected, not so much for the pecuniary advantage to be derived from them, as for the pleasure arising from having deserved well of their Country. We shall shortly be furnished with a list of such Storekeepers as can make it convenient to receive them, and shall then announce their names to the Public. In the same weekly newspaper for the issue of May 24, 1796, there appeared an advertisement (dated May 19) addressed " T o the Public," which stated: Samuel Jackson 8c Co. Inform the inhabitants of the Western Country, that they are making every exertion to forward the Completion of their
96
Papermaking in Pioneer
America
Paper Mill, which they are erecting, on Big Redstone, about four miles from Brownsville, in Fayette County, a never-failing Stream; That they have experienced Workmen engaged to carry on the work, and hope to be able before the expiration of the present year to furnish their fellow Citizens with the different kinds of paper usually in demand of their own manufacture, and of as good quality as any brought from beyond the mountains. They request their fellow Citizens generally, to promote their undertaking by encouraging the saving and collecting of rags, and inform Merchants and Storekeepers in particular, that they will give them a generous price in Cash for such clean Linnen or Cotton rags as they may collect. Redstone, May 19, 1796. It is certain that by the following year the mill was producing printing paper in fairly large quantities, for in the June 24, 1797, number of the Pittsburgh Gazette a notice stated: THIS PAPER IS MADE IN T H E WESTERN COUNTRY. It is with great pleasure we present to the public the Pittsburgh Gazette printed on paper made by Messrs. Jackson and Sharpless, on Redstone Creek, Fayette County—Writing paper of all kinds and quality, as well as printing paper, will be made at this mill; this is of great importance to the inhabitants of this country, not only because it will be cheaper than that which is brought across the mountains, but it will keep a large sum of money in the country which is yearly sent out for this article. The success of the undertaking will, however, depend on the industry used in collecting RAGS, as without them paper cannot be made. It is to be lamented that a false pride in some, and a disregard or contempt of so small a profit, in others, prevents them from furnishing this necessary article—It ought to be considered that shame should be attached to nothing but guilt; and that if the profit is small, consideration of public utility ought to have the greater weight. It is therefore hoped, that all classes of citizens, who wish to encourage their own manufactures, will save their Rags, by which they will encourage honest industry, and useful enterprise. It is inscribed in old county records that the first sheet of paper made in the Western Pennsylvania mill was formed by Polly Given, a comely young woman from Brownsville, a servant in the Sharpless household. The chief vatman was Alexander Deyarmon, a skilled papermaker, although locally regarded as an eccentric religious fanatic. Before the mill was producing salable paper, the entire project—buildings, water wheel, rag engine, vats, moulds, and felts —had cost six thousand dollars, twice the sum originally planned
Western Pennsylvania · 1796
97
upon. The additional money, above the fifteen hundred dollars raised by Sharpless, was advanced by the opulent Jackson, who held the total property in his own name. Jonathan Sharpless was apprehensive, but Samuel Jackson was a Quaker of honor, and in 1798, after the mill had become a success, he gave his worthy partner a clear title to his rightful half-interest. The thriving settlement of Pittsburgh was the largest market for the paper. Jonathan Sharpless would load a week's production on a two-horse wagon and drive to the town where he had no problem in disposing of the writing and printing paper, the equal of any manufactured in the East, and owing to the proximity to the market, it could be sold at a lower price. During the heydav of the mill there were twenty to twentyfive workers. Samuel Jackson and Jonathan Sharpless continued the profitable operation of the Redstone paper mill until 1810, when at forty-two years of age, Sharpless retired from participation, and rented his share of the mill to Jackson for twelve hundred dollars a year. Jackson's son Jesse, who had married Sharpless' daughter Betsy, assumed management of the papermaking establishment. At the death of Samuel Jackson in 1817, his son became sole owner of the paper mill, but later, Samuel Sharpless, one of the eleven children of Jonathan Sharpless, was taken into partnership. Although Jonathan Sharpless relinquished his duties in the paper mill in 1810, he continued his old trade of blacksmithing until his death on January 20, 1860, at the age of ninety-two. A member of the Sharpless family was actively connected with paper manufacture on Redstone Creek until 1832, at which time the business was taken over by others who continued the making of paper until the year 1842 when the entire property was destroyed by fire. The watermarks used on the "laid" moulds of the original Jackson and Sharpless mill consisted of the name "REDSTONE," in both roman and italic lettering, in connection with the initials "J & S"; also a dove was used in conjunction with these initials. After the "wove" type of paper came into use the mill used a wellexecuted beaver in delicate outline with the "J & S" initials. Several Jackson and Sharpless watermarks are shown in Figures 19 and 20.
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SOUTH CAROLINA
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· 1806
Ν September 8, 1768, a message was forwarded to Lord ( Hillsborough by Lieutenant-Governor Bull of South Carolina, which read: I cannot learn, upon most particular enquiry, that any manufacturers have ever been set up in this Province . . . and after most diligent search into our records, I cannot find that any public encouragement hath ever been given to any manufacture whatever. . . . W e have no GlassHouses, Paper, or Fulling-Mills in the Province.
From the decisive nature of this message, it is reasonably certain that paper was not made in the colony prior to 1768, nor was the vague plan advanced by William Bellamy, in 1775, for the establishment of a paper mill carried to any conclusion. From all existing evidence paper was not manufactured in South Carolina until 1806, although the art of printing had been introduced as early as 1731. During November 1775, the Provincial Congress of South Carolina undertook the encouragement of various types of manufacture, and the making of paper and metal working were listed among the trades considered of dominant importance to the wellbeing of the colony. One of the resolutions passed by the Congress offered "a premium of five hundred Pounds currency to be given to the person who shall first erect and establish a proper Paper Mill in this Colony, upon producing three reams of good writing paper manufactured thereat." -98 -
South Carolina · 1806
99
On March 22, 1776, no doubt in compliance with the resolution of 1775, William Bellamy appeared before Henry Laurens, president of the Council of Safety of the Provincial Congress, and advanced a proposal that he would construct "a proper Mill, for making Paper, and cutting Files at the same time." After considering Bellamy's plan, the members of the Congress voted: That the sum of three thousand Pounds, currency be advanced to the said William Bellamy, out of the Colony Treasury, on loan, for the term of five years, free of interest, in consideration, and for the express purpose of his forthwith erecting a proper Mill for making Paper and cutting Files, in as great perfection as in any part of Europe; he, the said Bellamy, giving undeniable security . . . for the performance thereof, and the repayment of said sum. There is no evidence to confirm the supposition that William Bellamy proceeded with his intention of erecting a paper mill in South Carolina. Transcripts of Bellamy's petition and acceptance by the Congress are the only records that exist relative to the proposed paper mill. It is possible that Bellamy manufactured metal files in South Carolina, but a study of the available information makes it reasonably certain that his suggested plan for the construction of a paper mill did not materialize. Little is known of William Bellamy, "of St. Pauls," beyond the bare record of his marriage in 1777 to Martha Baker; he evidently was not a prominent citizen of South Carolina. For more than a dozen years, my friend Dr. John Bennett, the noted author of Charleston, and I have been investigating the early papermaking history of South Carolina. It was not until late in 1945, however, that Dr. Bennett uncovered a definite clue in the form of four letters that had been written by the Waring family between the years 1806 and 1810. These nonconsecutive letters cleared the path in this research. T h e first of these letters, dated Columbia, November 12, 1806, was written by George Waring and addressed to Richard Waring, Charleston. T h e section of the letter pertaining to the paper mill reads: I suppose you have heard of my erecting a Paper Mill & Tan Yard. Let me know if it would be convenient for you to purchase or receive old
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Papermaking in Pioneer America
Rags & send up here by Boat. I would always endeavor to have money in your Hands for that purpose & allow you ten per Cent on the Cost of the Rags. Although George Waring, writing in 1806, did not state that he made the first paper produced in South Carolina, he did make it clear that he had erected a paper mill, and as he requested rags it may be assumed that the mill was in operation at this date. In view of authentic information to prove otherwise, it may be concluded that the Waring undertaking was the earliest mill in South Carolina to make usable paper. Almost two and a half years elapsed between the initial communication of 1806 and the subsequent letter dated Columbia, March 30, 1809. This second letter was addressed to Messrs. Waring & Hayne, and is also signed by George Waring. The letter reads: By the bearer, Mr. Powell, Patroon of Capt. Wade's Boat, you will receive Seventeen Reams of large Printing Paper, from the proceeds of which, please retain the balance of my account with you, & the remainder pay to Mr. Jno. Johnson or Order. When I was in Charleston I enquired the price of that size Paper & I was informed they sold it at four Dolls. & a quarter per Ream & I think mine is full as good as what I saw there. But don't take less than four Dollars per Rm. I wish you to offer it to Mr. Freneau first. On the reverse side of this letter J. Powell has signed this statement: Reed. Granby, March 30th 1809, of George Waring Seventeen Reams of Printing Paper marked G W in good order which I promise to deliver to Messrs. Waring & Hayne, Factors at Charleston in the like good order as received the dangers of the River only excepted, they paying freight for the same two Dollars & twelve & a half Cents. This letter indicates that George Waring's mill was producing fairly large quantities of paper, and it is possible that the initials "G W " formed a watermark in the sheets. The "Mr. Freneau" mentioned in the letter was Peter Freneau, one of the publishers of the Charleston City Gazette and. Daily Advertiser, issued intermittently from 1787 to 1820. An examination of the files of this newspaper did not reveal any printing paper that could be positively
South Carolina · 1806
101
identified as having been made in the Waring mill of South Carolina. The next letter in the interrupted series is dated Columbia, October 20, 1810, and gives an interesting sidelight on the early use of raw cotton as a material from which paper might be fabricated. This two-page letter penned in the neat hand of George Waring and addressed to his factors, Messrs. Waring and Hayne, Charleston, reads: I received your letter of the 5 th inst., but not as soon as I ought to have done, owing I suppose, to some neglect at the Post Office. With respect to the Cotton Mr. I. Robertson has, it does not answer for Paper as well as Rags, unless for Wrapping Paper, though it be clear of Sticks, Motes, &., I may put a proportion with Rags to make it answer for coarse printing Paper, if that is the case I will give him his price say three Dolls, per cwt., but if it is not clear of trash, I could not offer to give him more than one or two Cents per pound, according to the strength & cleanliness of it, the strength I would make no objection to, if it will answer for coarse printing Paper, but Wrapping Paper requires to be strong principally. If Mr. R. will part with the Cotton at the above prices delivered in Charleston, I must get you to obtain a Credit until I can send you down some Cotton, which I intend shortly to do. I am glad to find Cotton has taken a rise since you wrote, & I wish it mav continue so. The last of the four letters discovered by Dr. John Bennett in Charleston was likewise written from Columbia, South Carolina, by George Waring, the proprietor of the paper mill, and addressed to Waring and Hayne, the Charleston firm acting as agents for the Columbia paper manufactory; this letter is dated January 13, 1810. The section of this three-page letter that relates to George Waring's paper mill follows: I send you by Mr. Wade's Boat five Bales Cotton . . . also six Bundles of Printing Paper containing two Reams each directed to you, the freight of the Cotton is at 2 dollars per bale & the Paper half a Doll, per 100 lbs. This Paper I intended for Mr. Sargent, the editor of the Paper called "The Strength of the People," it is the size of his Paper & I send these few Reams to see whether I can supply him, you ought to get four Dolls. & a quarter cash per Ream, but if he thinks that too high & will not give it, you may take not less than four Dollars per Ream, the proceeds of the Paper, I wish to remain in your hands for the
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purpose of paying for Rags, which you will do when you meet with any person who will deliver them on board of the Boat well packed, none will answer but clean Cotton and Linen Rags, & I think best to be packed in Boxes. From the sale of the Cotton I have drawn on you in favor of Mr. Robt. Macnamara or order for thirty-eight Dollars which I will thank you to p a v . . . . I will thank you to send the balance of the proceeds of the Cotton up by Post, cutting the Bills in two 8c sending bv two different Mails, which can be done in one Week, pray dispose of the Cotton as soon as possible at a good price. George Waring of Columbia was not only operating the paper mill, but he had a tanning business as well, for which he appealed in two of his letters for materials and minor equipment. From the four letters that remain of Waring's correspondence with his Charleston agents, it was certain that he was also engaged in the growing of cotton. In George Waring's letter of 1809 he was endeavoring to sell paper of his manufacture to Peter Freneau for use in printing his newspaper; in 1810 W aring continued to solicit trade from the publisher of a Charleston newspaper, for the "Mr. Sargent" mentioned in his letter was John H. Sargent, who on June 24, 1809, founded the Strength of the People, a semiweekly publication that continued to be issued until September of the following year. The size of Sargent's newspaper was eighteen by twenty-two inches, so it is reasonable to assume that the twelve reams of printing paper that were shipped to Charleston by George Waring were of these dimensions. The printing paper used by both Freneau and Sargent in the publication of their respective newspapers is of inferior quality, and as it is not watermarked it is possible that the maker was reluctant to register the responsibility for its manufacture. A search in contemporary South Carolina imprints did not reveal any paper that could definitely be classified as having been made by George Waring in his South Carolina paper manufactory, an undertaking that evidently had a short life, as no records exist prior to 1806 or later than 1810. At the present time nothing remains of the Waring enterprise; only the four surviving letters prove that the paper mill was a
South Carolina · 1806
103
reality. The mill buildings were located at Granby, near Columbia, on the old line of the "falls of the rivers," the foot of the Piedmont region. The four existing letters relating to the South Carolina paper mill are in the possession of Dr. Joseph I. Waring, a direct descendant of the family, and these papers were generously loaned to Dr. John Bennett, Charleston, who in turn granted us the privilege of making the reproductions that were used in the limited edition of this book, published in 1950.
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O H I O · 1807
EFORE the founding of Ohio's first paper mill in 1807, most of the paper used by the printers of the Northwest Territory was made in Kentucky and in Western Pennsylvania. The earliest printing office in Ohio was established in Cincinnati by William Maxwell in November 1793; in the spring of the same year the Craig, Parkers and Company mill was operating in Kentucky, and three years later the Redstone mill of Jackson and Sharpless was producing usable paper in Fayette County, Western Pennsylvania. An examination of the paper used in early Ohio imprints and for the inscribing of documents and letters reveals that the early settlers of the West did not rely upon the wellestablished mills of New England and Eastern Pennsylvania for their writing and printing paper. From the beginning of printing in Ohio, the newly founded paper mills of the West supplied the needs, although not always in sufficient quantity, and only after overcoming almost insurmountable difficulties of transportation. The delays and disappointments encountered by the early printers in procuring paper are graphically set down in the editorials and notices of contemporary newspapers. In the December 20, 1794, issue of William Maxwell's the Centinel of the North-Western Territory, the first newspaper to be published in Ohio, a seven-line editorial gives terse testimony of the hardships involved in acquiring -104-
Ohio · 18Ol
105
paper for printing this four-page weekly journal. This notice reads: "Being disappointed in getting of paper according to expectation, has obliged us to Print on so bad equallity. W e hope our subscribers will consider the great inconvenience that we labour under in procuring paper at so far a distance from where it is manufactured." Although Georgetown, Kentucky, where the paper was probably made, lies only seventy miles south of Cincinnati, the overland route, in 1794, was no more than a path broken through the wilderness, a rough, dangerous trail. The difficulties of securing paper for use on the hand presses of Ohio's early publishers are further revealed in contemporary copies of the Scioto Gazette, a newspaper founded in Chillicothe in 1800. In the issue of this journal for November 13, 1802, the publisher, Nathaniel Willis, displayed minor irritation concerning the difficulty he experienced in procuring printing paper for his weekly newspaper. Willis' article reads: By reason of the Menongehalia river not having been navigable for some time past, we have been disappointed in receiving a supply of paper from Redstone, which was contracted for and to have been delivered at the mouth of Scioto last month; in order to obtain a supply we sent to the mills at George-Town, Kentucky, but in this effort we were also disappointed, there not being a ream to be had, we have therefore been under the necessity of sending by land to Redstone, at a very heavy expense, from whence we shall be furnished in two weeks, our readers will therefore excuse our issuing half a sheet, during that period. From the circumstances of the high price at which paper now comes at, the Editor earnestly calls on those indebted, . . . to come forward and make payment. In the issue of December 18, 1802, of the same newspaper, Editor Willis again mildly complained in this manner: A disappointment in receiving paper (at a time we had a right to expect it), has been the cause of our not publishing the Gazette for two weeks past. We have now obtained a supply, but its late arrival, together with an engagement to finish the Journals of the Convention, by Monday next, disables us from issuing more than half a sheet this week. We have now made such arrangements for paper, as we have reason to believe we shall not again be placed in the situation we have of late been.
106
Fapennakiv*
iv Pioneer
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The Journals of the Convention mentioned in the notice were duly issued "From the Press of N. Willis, Printer to the Convention, Chillicothe, 1802." An examination of the paper used in one edition of this pamphlet leaves no question regarding its origin, for the folded laid sheets clearly bear the "J&S" and " R E D S T O N E " watermarks (Figures 19 and 20), offering convincing evidence that the Western Pennsylvania mill of Jackson and Sharpless furnished book paper to the printing shop of Nathaniel Willis, one of the pioneer editors and publishers of Ohio, and the grandfather of Nathaniel Parker Willis (1806-67), celebrated poet and journalist. The first paper mill in Ohio, and the third west of the mountains, was established in 1807, near Fawcettstowm (now East Liverpool), St. Clair Township, Columbiana County, on Little Beaver Creek. The owners of the mill were John Coulter of Brooke County, Virginia (now West Virginia), John Bever of Georgetown, Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and Jacob Bowman of Brownsville, Fayette County, Pennsylvania. The most active members of the partnership were Bever and Bowman, and as the latter gentleman was a resident of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, the seat of the Jackson and Sharpless Redstone mill, it may be assumed that he was the most versed in the various branches of paper manufacture. Jacob Bowman was a wealthy and respected pioneer of Fayette County; he had held the office of postmaster of Brownsville, he was president of the local bank, and he also engaged in the successful operation of a mill for making wrought-iron nails. John Bever was born in Ireland, of a German father and an Irish mother; he had fluent command of the German language. John Bever emigrated to America in 1788 and settled in Western Pennsylvania where he accumulated a considerable fortune through supplying materials for the building of blockhouses for the protection of the white settlements against invasion by the Indians. After the State of Ohio was organized, John Bever was employed as a surveyor, and in this capacity he traveled from one county to another, which enabled him to acquire parcels of wooded land in various localities, resulting in increased wealth. Columbiana was one of the Eastern Ohio counties that Bever surveyed, and while working in this region he conceived the possibility
Ohio · 1801
107
of using the water power of Little Beaver Creek for the purpose of manufacturing. The original agreement among the three gentlemen "for the erection of a Paper Mill near the mouth of Little Beaver Creek" is dated August 1, 1806. This document enters into specific details relative to the boundaries of the paper-mill property, but unfortunately for the historians of papermaking, no descriptions are given of the mill and its equipment. It was estimated that the building and appliances would cost six thousand dollars. The enterprise was known as The Ohio Paper Mill, with the firm name of Coulter, Bever, and Bowman, the three initials "C Β & Β" always appearing in the watermarks in the paper. The earliest printed notice of Ohio's first paper mill appeared in the 1808 (sixth) edition of The Navigator by Zadok Cramer, a publication printed and issued by Cramer and Spear in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The terse paragraph in The Navigator reads: "Little Beaver Creek, left side. A quarter of a mile below Georgetown. Near the mouth of the creek are two grist, one saw, and a paper mill erected in 1807-8, by Messrs. Coulter, Be [a] ver, and Bowman." This succinct reference to the earliest Ohio paper mill was included in an account of Zadok Cramer's journey down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh. In this edition (1808) of The Navigator, the compiler located Little Beaver Creek on the "left side" of the river, which would have placed the paper mill in Pennsylvania. This was an error that he corrected in the following edition (seventh) of 1811, in which issue the description reads: "Little Beaver Creek, right-hand side." In all subsequent editions of The Navigator the position is correctly stated. The location of the paper mill has always been within Ohio, less than a mile west of the Pennsylvania line, a boundary that has undergone no change since the original survey of 1786. (According to the pamphlet, A Tour through the Western Country, A.D. 1818 and 1819 by Benjamin Harding, Surveyor, published in New London, Connecticut, in 1819, the people of the East were confused regarding the OhioPennsylvania boundary, and were even uncertain as to whether Pittsburgh was in Pennsylvania or Ohio.)
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The most complete contemporary description of the Ohio paper mill is in Browne's Cincinnati Almanac, for the year of Our Lord, 1810, by Robert Stubbs, Philom. This edition of the almanac was printed in the autumn of 1809; the paragraphs relating to the paper mill read in full: The road from Fawcettstown up the bank of the river is open, and leads to Little Beaver creek, 6 miles on which is a grist and saw mill. A toll bridge is erecting, which is, by the act of the Legislature, to stand good for the term of 50 years. The creek is full of large rocks, and affords a romantic scene. About 2 m. up from the mouth is a paper mill, built of stone, and admirably calculated to perform a great deal of business. The paper made at this mill is equal, if not superior, to any made this side of the mountains; and there is every reason to suppose, from the attention paid to the manufactory, that a large stroke of business will be satisfactorily carried on. How strange to say, that though there are not less than ten or twelve printing presses in the state of Ohio, yet the only paper mill in the state is situate within one mile of its eastern boundary. There does not appear a better, or more sure and lucrative speculation, than what might be derived from a well conducted paper mill; and it is sincerely to be wished, that some adventurous gentlemen would permit their attention to be directed to that object. The watermarks of Ohio's first paper mill, owned by Coulter, Bever, and Bowman, did not have the variation of design found in the marks of the earliest mill in Kentucky (1793), and the pioneer mill of Western Pennsylvania (1796). The Ohio mill used one emblem only, a crudely executed eagle, with the initials "C Β & Β," the "&" usually sewed to the "wove" moulds in the reversed position. It is obvious that the workman who fashioned the watermarking devices did not employ a master pattern, or template, in bending the thin wire into the desired form. Inasmuch as the eagle watermarks were made without a definite model, it is possible to distinguish the sheets of paper that were formed on each individual mould. In an examination of considerable paper from the Ohio mill, it has been determined that there were two pairs of moulds of the "laid" type. When "wove" moulds came into use at the Ohio mill, the same poorly designed eagle and initials were continued for
Ohio - 1801
109
marking the paper. The mill also had at least two pairs of "wove" moulds (Figures 21 and 22). John Bever, probably the most prominent member of the papermaking concern, died May 26, 1836, leaving an accumulation of lands valued at many thousands of dollars. His will had been signed January 26, 1832, and his share of the paper mill was bequeathed to his daughter Mirtilla, who had married into the Bowman family. The section of John Bever's will that relates to the mill reads: Also the undivided three-fourths part of fifty-seven acres and ninetyeight perches of land and Paper Mill and the other buildings thereon erected, together with the fixtures and tools thereunto belonging, and all the interest, I hold in said Establishment; the other undivided fourth part belonging to Jacob Bowman of Brownsville (Pennsylvania). This is a valuable property, and I estimate my Interest at nine thousand dollars. John Bever died at the age of eighty years, while residing at Springford, his commodious farm home in Columbiana County, Ohio. The last years of his life were spent in a substantial house he had constructed for his second wife, Lydia Vaughan, and it was his wish that he should be buried in the side of a hill about two hundreds yards from this dwelling. His request was religiously adhered to, and the elderly gentleman-papermaker was laid to rest in a low brick tomb cut into the hillside. In 1855 a torrential rain swept down the rocky, wooded hill, uprooting trees and strewing stones and earth in its path. The masonry of the walled grave was demolished; after nineteen years of burial, John Bever's heavy wooden coffin was exposed to the four winds. Henry Bever, the son, removed the remains to the farm of his father's second wife, and there in the soil of the old Vaughan estate one of the owners of Ohio's first paper mill was interred the second time. The site of this grave is about one mile east of Oneida, a village near the northern boundary of Carroll County, Ohio. The earliest paper manufactory in Ohio ceased operating a number of years prior to the death of John Bever. Apparently the mill did not continue to make paper after the introduction of the papermachine into the western country. In the twelfth edition of The
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Navigator (1824), it is stated that the mill is "now owned by Bever and Bowman," but no intimation is forthcoming relative to the activity of the paper mill at that time. At present nothing remains of the original stone building, although from the old deeds it is possible to determine the approximate location on Little Beaver Creek. A search for a paper mould that might possibly have survived has not been successful. (In compiling the history of the Coulter, Bever, and Bowman paper mill the chief source of research has been the remarkable collection of "Ohioiana" in the Ross County Historical Society, Chillicothe, Ohio, presided over by Colonel David McKell and Mr. Eugene Rigney, both versed in all phases of Ohio history.) The Elastern Ohio mill established in 1807 on Little Beaver Creek in Columbiana County held the monopoly in the manufacture of paper in the state for almost four years. It was not until 1810 that two other paper mills were erected in Ohio, one in Hamilton County and one in Warren County; a year later Ohio's fourth paper mill was built, in Hocking County; and in 1812 the fifth mill had its origin, in Ross County. After 1815 papermaking became a thriving industry in Ohio, and each year saw the construction of new mills in all parts of the state. An early paper mill of Ohio that has been the subject of no little controversy, regarding the date of founding and the birthplace of the founder, was the manufactory that was established in 1810 on the Little Miami River by Christian Waldschmidt (1755-1814). From records lately uncovered it is possible that Christian Waldschmidt was born in Pennsylvania, a descendant of Johannes Waldschmidt of Lancaster. (Miss Marie Dickoré, a historian of Cincinnati, has given the Waldschmidt family genealogy considerable study and we will await her ultimate findings with interest.) In the German-text publication, Der Deutsche Pioneer, issued in Cincinnati in 1878-79, the editor, Dr. H. A. Rattermann, wrote a romantic story regarding Christian Waldschmidt which places his birth in Gengenbach, in the deep valley of the Kinzig, Germany. According to Rattermann, young Christian Waldschmidt's father entered his son in the University of Tübingen, but Christian, a
Ohio ·
noi
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theological student, caused his staunch Luthern parent displeasure by uniting with the Pietists, a religious cult that had been organized in Germany in the seventeenth century. Owing to the family rupture over religious matters young Christian Waldschmidt left his home and with twenty or more devout converts to the Pietistic teachings emigrated to America by way of Holland, as had been done by William Rittenhouse a century earlier. The little group of religious zealots reached Philadelphia in July 1786, and under the leadership of Christian Waldschmidt settled in Eastern Pennsylvania where many Pietists had located. After living in Eastern Pennsylvania eight years, and being constantly told of the opportunities to be found in the western country, Christian Waldschmidt and several of his associates decided to cross the mountains and explore the newly opened territory of Western Ohio. In the autumn of 1794 they began the overland journey across Pennsylvania to Pittsburgh, from which settlement the small band of travelers procured the regulation flatboats and pushed their way down the Ohio River to Cincinnati, which had been laid out only five years previously. Following the Little Miami Valley beyond the mouth of East Fork, the venturous company reached Big Bottom, a region of extensive forests, arable land, and abundant brooks affording the possibility of water-power development. Christian Waldschmidt and his compatriots viewed the fertile region with expectancy and enthusiasm; no time was lost in arranging with John Cleves Symmes, of Miami Purchase fame, for the acquisition of 1,140 acres of land at the cost of one dollar an acre. Several members of the company remained in Ohio for the purpose of clearing a section of the land and for building log cabins; in the meantime, Christian Waldschmidt returned to Eastern Pennsylvania to tell his family and German companions of the fortunate purchase of farm land in Western Ohio. B y the spring of 1796, the Waldschmidt family and most of the original group had settled in their new homes along the Little Miami River. After locating in Ohio, Christian Waldschmidt anglicized the family name to Waldsmith and henceforth this surname was commonly used, although the little group of Pietists called their community Germany and continued to make
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Papermaking in Pioneer America
use of the German language. They built a sawmill, wooden dwellings, barns, and a church; they then constructed a storage house for grain, a distillery, a fulling mill, and spinning and weaving shops. (Existing specimens of woven linen cloth attest the fine craftsmanship of Waldsmith's looms.) Also the pioneer workers constructed a tavern and a general store along the winding lane through the village. The farming and industrial community had become selfsufficient and independent. By the year 1804 the profits from the farms and workshops enabled Christian Waldsmith to erect a permanent stone house, the largest and most substantial in the colony. This two-story dwelling served as a home for the growing Waldsmith family, and also as a general office and store; within the thick walls of this building was transacted the banking business of the community. Waldsmith was not only the leader in all the commercial activities of the settlement, but he also served as minister and spiritual adviser. Christian Waldsmith did not overlook an opportunity for increasing the business of the village. There was a growing need for a paper mill in the vicinity of Cincinnati, as books and newspapers had been published continuously since 1796. In 1810 the town had a population of 2,540, and there were two newspapers, Liberty Hall and the Western Spy, with combined circulations of about one thousand copies each week. For the printing of these publications the paper was supplied by the mills of Kentucky and Western Pennsylvania. In the November 14, 1804, issue of the Western Spy, the editor, Joseph Carpenter, wrote: "It is impossible to obtain paper at all seasons of the year, owing to the distance from whence we are mostly supplied. . . . W e are in daily expectations of a supply of paper from Redstone [Fayette County, Pennsylvania]," and in the January 30, 1805, number of the same Cincinnati newspaper, the editor mentioned that the Ohio River was full of ice, but he was now able to send for "that paper which is now ready for us in Kentucky." There was urgent need for a paper mill in Western Ohio, and Christian Waldsmith and his followers did not hesitate to seize the opportunity for the further industrial development of their community; they were willing to undertake any venture that
Ohio · n o i
113
assured a profit. Although Waldsmith and his co-workers had been reared in an important papermaking district of Germany and had lately lived in the paper mill section of Eastern Pennsylvania, it is unlikely that any member of the colony was a skilled papermaker. For erecting, equipping, and operating the paper mill it was necessary that a trained mill builder and papermaker be brought to Western Ohio from the more developed East. The artisan chosen for the work was John Smith, an adroit papermaker, who had learned his trade under the tutorage of his father, Johann Schmidt. T h e father had gained his knowledge of the papermaking craft in Reinerz, German Silesia, a province of Prussia; he came to America about 1780, and settled in iMaryland where his son was born. Young John Smith answered Waldsmith's call for an experienced papermaker, and in the spring of 1810 he departed from Maryland by oxcart to cross the mountains to his new home and work with the little coterie of Pietists in Western Ohio. The earliest printed reference to the Waldsmith paper mill appeared as an advertisement soliciting papermaking rags in the January 16, 1810, issue of Liberty Hall. The notice reads: "Rags Wanted. C. Waldsmith Having commenced building a Paper Mill, on the Little Miami, respectfully informs the public that Store Goods will be given for any quantity of clean linen and cotton Rags, at 3 cents a pound. . . ." From this notice it may be inferred that Christian Waldsmith had begun the construction of the paper mill in the Little Miami Valley prior to January 1810, and from an editorial in the January 26, 1811, issue of the Western Spy, also published in Cincinnati, we have evidence that usable printing paper was being made a year following the building of the mill. This notice reads: "Our impression appears for the first time on paper manufactured at Mr. Waldsmith's new paper mill in Sycamore township. Much praise is due to Mr. W . for his unremitted exertions to furnish the neighboring printers with an early and constant supply. Nothing appears to be wanting to render this establishment of the greatest utility, except the care of the industrious housewife in saving her rags. . . ." By the end of the year 1811, it was found necessary to increase the output of the mill and
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Papermaking in Pioneer
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another vat was installed; also Waldsmith was seeking an instructor for the night school that he maintained for the education of his workers. Christian Waldsmith's short career as a paper-mill proprietor ended suddenly on March 31, 1814, during a severe epidemic of influenza that swept the small community. T h e brief obituary notice in the April 12, 1814, issue of Liberty Hall attests to the usefulness of his life. H e did not leave a will and there was difficulty in the settlement of the estate that amounted to nearly twenty-five thousand dollars. After considerable delay it was arranged that Matthias Kugler ( 1 7 8 3 - 1 8 5 4 ) , who had married Waldsmith's daughter Catherine Elizabeth ( 1 7 8 1 - 1 8 4 6 ) , assume the management of the paper mill. John Smith, who had worked for Christian Waldsmith, continued as head vatman and mill manager under Kugler's ownership. Ebenezer Hiram Stedman of Massachusetts, who had gone west in 1816 to work with his father in the paper mills of Kentucky, was later employed in Matthias Kugler's mill in Ohio; and in young Stedman's diary, previously quoted, there are several poignant references to the Kugler family and to John Smith, the expert papermaker. Although Stedman's manuscript is written in a disconnected manner, it is, nevertheless, the only firsthand account of pioneer papermaking in America. T h e section of the diary devoted to Stedman's experiences in Ohio at the age of fourteen reads in part: In the summer of 1822, the paper mill in Georgetown [Kentucky], had to stop for lack of water. Father concluded to take me and go to Ohio to work. If ever a boy regretted to leave home I did; I was the best layboy that could be found and I had to go. Matthias Kugler had sent his wagon to Georgetown to move Mr. Webb, an English papermaker, to the Ohio mill. Father and I left in this wagon, but with what sorrow I departed from the Kentucky mill. There were few settlements between Georgetown and Cincinnati, the country almost a wilderness. W e arrived at Matthias Kugler's mill in the evening of the fourth day from home. I could not eat or sleep, but I had to go to work the next day. Father was employed as a paper finisher; I was the layboy. Old Kugler owned five large farms in cultivation; near his stone house there was a sawmill, a merchant mill, and a distillery; on the other side of
Ohio · 1807
115
the millrace, crossed by a bridge, stood the large paper mill, the woolen factory, and the fulling mill. He was an ignorant German, and could not read or write, but he had the talent to drive this large business and watch the corners. When Kugler came to Ohio he worked for eight dollars a month for the man [Christian Waldsmith] who was later to be his father-in-law. One day young Kugler was sent to the barn to flail out grain with his employer's daughter and they got mixed up amongst the grain, and Kugler had to m a m · her, that was the way it commenced . . .
Stedman describes Catherine Elizabeth Kugler as being "very fleshy, with a mild, good face; she spoke broken English." In his diary Stedman also mentions John Smith, the chief vatman, in this manner: " . . . a man named Smith was boss of the paper mill, he was very religious, a Methodist preacher; at camp meeting Smith persuaded all of the papermakers to attend." The paper produced in the original Waldsmith mill was watermarked " M I A M I " in the left side of the paper, and " W & C O " in the right side. After Matthias Kugler became owner of the mill the paper was marked " M K U G L E R & S O N , " the oldest son having joined his father. The Waldsmith-Kugler paper mill was destroyed by fire in 1828, and was not rebuilt. The settlement of Germany, on the Little Miami River, founded by Christian Waldsmith in 1796, has been known since Civil W a r days as Camp Dennison; the village lies along the Wooster turnpike almost undisturbed by the inroads of modernism. The main stone house, built in 1804, had long been used as a storage for grain, but in recent years the Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution has undertaken the restoration of the building. The vine-covered Matthias Kugler house, also of stone, stands close to the highway, a setting suggestive of a cottage in the English papermaking village of Wookey Hole. Today nothing remains of the Waldsmith paper mill except a few foundation stones that are now only an annoyance to the plowman as he tills the rich bottom land for the annual corn planting. Almost contemporaneous with the Christian Waldsmith paper mill was the establishment of the Union Paper Mill, founded during
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the year 1810 by John Cross and C. Earenfight, in the Little Miami Valley, about six and a quarter miles above Lebanon, in Warren County. John Cross, one of the two partners, was an expert English papermaker, skilled in all branches of the craft, having served the required apprenticeship of seven years in his native country. John Cross joined Earenfight in the paper-mill venture after he had made an effort to acquire land along a stream in Ross County for a mill of his own. Early in 1810 young Cross was employed as chief vatman in a Georgetown, Kentucky, mill, but tiring of working for an employer he wrote a letter, dated February 24, 1810, to Nathaniel Massie, one of the founders of Chillicothe, relative to the possibility of acquiring a site for a paper mill on Kinnikinnick Creek, Ross County. Inasmuch as the earliest advertisement of Cross and Earenfight appeared in the December 12, 1810, issue of Liberty Hall, it is possible that the mill was producing paper at that time. This notice reads: 40,000 Wt. Rags, Clean Linen or Cotton, wanted at the Union Paper Mill, on the Little Miami, six and a quarter miles from Lebanon, for which the higest price in cash will be given by Cross & Earenfight, who want two or three smart active boys, of about 14 or 16 years of age, of good character and reputable connexions, as apprentices to the Papermaking business. In 1813, John Cross's interest in the mill was purchased by Samuel J. Browne, one of the publishers of Liberty Hall, no doubt with a plan for producing a constant supply of paper for the growing printing industry of Cincinnati. After disposing of his share in the mill, it is probable that John Cross returned to his native land to work at his occupation. He was one of the few English-trained papermakers who traveled as far west as Kentucky and Ohio to practice his difficult trade. Much of the writing paper made in the early mills of these two western states is expertly formed and finished, showing a degree of excellence that could only have been achieved by careful, highly skilled workers. Although it has long been considered that the two paper mills of the Little Miami Valley held second and third places in the chronological history of Ohio papermaking, it is possible that the mill of the
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Pitcher brothers in Hocking County was in operation about the same time. As early as 1800 Rudolph Pitcher settled in Lancaster, Fairfield County, and was soon joined by his brother Abraham, both natives of Switzerland. The only contemporary record supporting the assumption that the two Pitcher brothers actually engaged in making paper in Ohio is an advertisement in the Supporter, published in Chillicothe, Ohio, and dated March 24, 1810, which reads in pan: "Rags Wanted. The subscribers are erecting and will soon have completed, a Paper Mill—Therefore will give the highest price for Clean Linen and Cotton Rags, also Linsey and the Swinglings tow of Flax." (The "Linsey" mentioned was a mixed cotton and wool cloth, and this material, called linseywoolsey, along with the swingling of flax, could have been used in connection with linen and cotton rags in the making of coarse paper.) The Pitcher papermaking firm was known as the Good Hope Mill, probably from the location which is thought to have been in Good Hope Township in north Hocking County, near the southern border of Fairfield County. Beyond the meager newspaper notice, dated March 24, 1810, nothing has been recorded of the Pitcher papermaking undertaking; no watermarks have been found that could be positively identified as originating in the Hocking County paper mill. T h e fifth paper mill in Ohio was established in Ross County, following the two mills of the Little Miami Valley by only two years. In 1812 David Crouse, whose family had settled in Ross County in 1798, was erecting a gristmill for his own use on the banks of Kinnikinnick Creek in Green Township. T h e mill was nearing completion when Crouse was visited by two young men from the East, Hezekiah and Isaiah Ingham. The Inghams had been practicing papermaking in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where they had learned the trade during the time their oldest brother, Samuel Delucenna Ingham, had been superintendent of a paper mill. The two younger brothers, determined to continue the papermaking craft, traveled west, while their brother Samuel remained in the East. H e soon gave up the paper business, entered politics, and eventually became the Secretary of the Treasury in the cabinet of
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President Jackson. Hezekiah and Isaiah Ingham were in the West seeking a location for a paper mill, and the abundant flow of clear water in Kinnikinnick Creek appealed to them for their venture. These two energetic and persuasive young men induced David Crouse to lease the intended gristmill to them for a term of seven years. In this small building, converted from a grain-grinding mill to a paper manufactory, the two Ingham brothers made the finest paper that had been produced in Ohio to that time. The watermark used by this mill was " H & I INGHAM," executed in the regulation outline form of lettering. During the seven years' lease of the mill to the Inghams, David Crouse, the owner of the building, had every opportunity to study the various processes used in the making of paper; also it was obvious to him that the trade was carried on with considerable profit. There was increasing demand for the well-formed, clean writing and printing paper produced by the Ingham brothers and their trained helpers. At the close of the lease the astute David Crouse decided to enter the papermaking trade himself, and with the workers formerly employed by the Ingham brothers, the Kinnikinnick mill was then operated under the Crouse name, each sheet of paper bearing the watermark "D CROUSE" in outline lettering. In 1814 the Franklin Paper Mill was founded by Cramer, Spear and Eichbaum, on the east bank of Little Beaver Creek, Columbiana County, the approximate location of the original Ohio paper mill of 1807. The Franklin mill was managed by John Spear until his death in 1841. Following the Franklin mill was the Scott and Bayless papermaking manufactory in Steubenville, Jefferson County. Zadok Cramer in his Pittsburgh Almanac, for the year 1815, wrote of this mill: "Steubenville . . . a steam paper mill with three engines is erecting here, and will shortly be in operation." The Jefferson County paper mill is of especial interest for the reason that it furnished the paper for printing the wall hangings designed by Thomas Cole (1801-48). Cole's father emigrated from Chorley, England, to Steubenville, Ohio, in 1819, and commenced the decorating of paper for use on the walls of the houses of the well-to-do settlers.
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Young Thomas Cole cut the wood blocks, mixed the colors, and printed the papers, each sheet separately as was necessary prior to the introduction of the papermaking-machine with its continuous web, or reel, of paper. Thomas Cole later became a highly esteemed American artist and founded the Hudson River School, perhaps the most representative style of painting to have its origin in this country. Although Ohio was not originally settled until the late eighteenth century, a paper mill was founded as early as 1807. This was but forty-one years after the first paper mill was established in Connecticut; only thirty-nine years following the earliest mill in New York; but thirty years after the first paper was made in the State of New Hampshire; and only fourteen years following the pioneer papermaking of Vermont.
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GEORGIA
· 1810
E O R G I A , the last English colony to be established in America, was founded in 1733, and almost thirty years later (March 4, 1762), the General Assembly of the Royal Province of Georgia passed an act authorizing the appointment of James Johnston, a Scotchman, as official printer. On April 7, 1763, Johnston established in Savannah the Georgia Gazette, a weekly newspaper that was published intermittently until 1802. Most of the paper used by James Johnston and the other Georgia printers of this early period had been made in the mills of the East, or brought from England and the Low Countries. A few sheets of writing paper bearing correspondence originating in Savannah have been found with the watermarks of the earliest paper mills of Kentucky and Western Pennsylvania. In 1810 there were no fewer than twelve weekly and daily newspapers issued in the State of Georgia. There was urgent need for a paper mill within the confines of the state, and Zachariah Sims, presumedly a skilled papermaker from the North, hoped to supply this demand. The earliest reference to Zachariah Sims's paper mill was an appeal for financial assistance, recorded in the Resolutions of the Georgia General Assembly, which reads: In Senate, 22d November, 1810. The select committee to whom was referred the petition of Zachariah Sims, praying a loan of four thousand - 120 -
Georgia · 1810
121
dollars, to enable him to complete the establishment of a paper manufactory in Greene County in this state, are of opinion, that the prayer of the petitioner is reasonable and ought to be granted. Your committee have received information from persons of most respectable standing in society for integrity and capacity to judge, that Mr. Sims' expenditures have been great to accomplish the said object, and his works are in considerable forwardness, and that with the aid of the solicited loan, he will in very few months, have his said works in complete operation, to the great benefit of the state. Your committee therefore recommends that the prayer of the petitioner be granted, and that the sum of three thousand dollars be loaned to him, upon his giving bond with two securities, to be approved of by His Excellency the Governor, for the return of the money into the Treasury of this state, within the term of three years from the time of his receiving the same, and that the said payment be further secured by a mortagage on the real estate of said Zachariah Sims, to the full value and amount of said loan, to be judged of by the justices of the Inferior court of the county of Greene, or any three of them. Resolved, That there shall be appropriated to the said Zachariah Sims, out of any monies unappropriated, the sum of three thousand dollars, to enable him to carry into operation a paper manufactory, upon his giving bond and sufficient security to His Excellency the Governor for the return of said money with interest, into the Treasury of this state, at the expiration of three years next after the said Zachariah Sims shall receive the same. Approved, 10th December, 1810. In compliance with the resolution, Zachariah Sims evidently satisfied the authorities of his ability to reimburse the State of Georgia for the loan to enable him to complete the building and equipping of his paper mill, and on January 10, 1811, a manuscript record of the transaction in the "Executive Department Minutes, 1800-12," reads: Mr. Zachariah Sims of the county of Greene attended and presented a Bond executed of the 7th Instant by himself with Ezekiel E. Park, Thomas Ligon, Abraham Heard, and Robert Royston, Esquires, of the county aforesaid as his securities, to secure the payment to the State of the sum of three thousand dollars to be loaned him as stated in and by an act of the Legislature of this State passed on the 15th day of December, 1810, appropriating money for the political year 1811, for the purpose of enabling him to carry into operation a paper manufactory, and the said Bond being deemed good as respects the securities
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Papermaking in Fioneer
America
thereto, it is therefore accepted and approved of. Reference being then had to a resolution of the Legislature approved on the 10th day of December last relative to the foregoing subject in which it is diere stated that the said Zachariah Sims shall give a Mortgage on his real estate as well as a Bond to secure the State for the return of the money to be loaned him as aforesaid, Whereupon it is Ordered That a Mortgage be prepared by one of the Secretaries of this Department, which being done, the said Zachariah Sims signed the same. Ordered that the aforesaid Bond and Mortgage be handed to the Treasurer and filed in that Office, and that a Warrant No. 109 be drawn on the Treasurer in favor of the said Zachariah Sims for the sum of Three thousand dollars as a loan, for the purpose of enabling him to carry into operation a paper manufactory on the Oconee River in the County of Greene, payable out of any monies which now are or hereafter may be in the Treasury not otherwise specially appropriated, Chargeable to Account of Special Appropriation of 1811, which was presented and signed. Although the location of Zachariah Sims's paper mill has been definitely determined as having been situated on the Oconee River, near Scull Shoals, in Greene County, there is but little authentic information regarding Sims or his venture in Georgia papermaking. The construction of the mill building was probably begun early in 1810, for on December 15, 1809, it was recorded that Zachariah Sims was granted a charter to build a toll bridge over the Oconee River at his mill in Greene County where he received a grant of eighty-seven and one-half acres of land. It has not been possible to find any paper that could positively be identified as having been made in Zachariah Sims's paper mill; no watermarks have been found. There is the possibility that the mill was never put into operation, although existing records and documents attest that a paper mill was constructed on the Oconee River. In any event, Georgia's earliest paper mill was short lived, for in 1814 the state commenced proceedings for the recovery of the three thousand dollars that had been advanced to Zachariah Sims in 1811. The following notice in the Resolutions of the Georgia General Assembly must have been unwelcome news to Zachariah Sims, who for almost five years had been struggling against overwhelming difficulties to make a success of the papermaking venture:
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·1810
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In the House of Representatives, Tuesday 15th November, 1814. Be it resolved, that His Excellency the Governor be, and he is hereby authorized and required to cause the bond that was given by Zach. Sims principal, E. Park, Thomas Ligon, Abram Heard, and Robert Rovston, securities for $3000 that was loaned the said Zach. Sims, be collected as soon at it may be practicable. Approved, 22d November, 1814.
The forced termination of Zachariah Sims's papermaking activities is also disclosed in the "Executive Minutes, 1814-15," a finely penned manuscript which reads in full: Monday 19th December, 1814. A Resolution of the Legislature Approved the 22d November ult. being taken into consideration, it is, Ordered that George R. Clayton, Esquire, Treasurer, do transmit to the Solicitor General of the Ocmulgee District the Bond executed to the State by Zachariah Sims, E. Park, Thomas Ligon, Abram Heard, and Robert Royston on the 7th of January, 1811, for the sum of Three thousand dollars and also a Mortgage from said Sims to the State securing the payment of said sum, bearing date on the 10th of the same month, with directions to put said Bond and Mortgage in suit.
The paper-mill building, papermaking equipment, and waterpower rights were sold at "public outcry" to satisfy the claim of three thousand dollars that had been advanced to Zachariah Sims by the State of Georgia. The property was purchased by Thomas Stocks, President of the Georgia Senate, for an amount of money that was far short of the loan given by the state; the erstwhile papermaker not only lost almost five years' work, but also his real estate, which was taken to meet the obligation he had incurred in 1811. Thomas Stocks disposed of the land and building to his brother-inlaw, Thomas Ligon, one of the bondsmen for the original loan. Apparently the Sims papermaking equipment was abandoned, as a portion of the building was converted to the use of a public cotton ginnery and the remaining section of the structure was made into a distillery. This arrangement lasted until early in the 1840's when the property was acquired by Dr. Thomas N. Poullain who rebuilt the foundations and other parts of the original paper manufactory and devoted the entire mill and water power to the preparation and bailing of cotton. The Poullain ginnery was one of the few com-
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Papermaking in Pioneer America
mereiai buildings along the path of the invading Northern Army that survived the ravages of the Civil War, an unusual circumstance that was due to the resourcefulness of a young Massachusetts woman living in Georgia. In 1853 the Presbyterian Church founded a seminary for young ladies in Greensboro, Greene County, and several of the teachers employed by the Georgia school came from New Engand. Among this group of instructors were youthful Louisa May Alcott, who in later years wrote Little Women, and Ann Mariah Lyman, a Massachusetts schoolmarn versed in teaching "the fundamental principles of morals, conduct, and deportment to pious young ladies." A short time after commencing her duties at the Presbyterian seminary, Ann Mariah Lyman married one of Dr. Poullain's sons and they lived near Scull Shoals, not far distant from the location of Zachariah Sims's old paper mill. In 1865, when General William Tecumseh Sherman's army passed through Georgia on their "March to the Sea," the soldiers from the North devastated the countryside and applied the torch to most of the mills and places of manufacture; wanton destruction was everywhere along their path; there were few buildings that were not burned to the ground. When the enemy soldiers reached the Poullain cotton ginnery, the rebuilt Zacharias Sims paper mill, they were met by young Poullain's wife, who pleaded with the armed men to spare the old structure as a historic landmark of Georgia. Impressed by the young woman's Yankee accent, and being told that she was a Massachusetts girl, General Sherman's soldiers marched past the mill, leaving it unmolested. At the present time no trace remains of the Zachariah Sims paper mill where the first paper was produced in Georgia between the years 1810 and 1814. Following the closing of the Zachariah Sims mill no paper was made in the State of Georgia until the year 1849 when a papermaking-machine was placed in operation in Marietta, Cobb County.
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TENNESSEE
· 1811
E O R G E R O U L S T O N E , the first printer in Tennessee, was born in 1767 in the town of Boston where he served his apprenticeship in this noble calling. On the thirtieth of March, 1786, he began a career for himself when he established the Salem Chronicle, and Essex Advertiser, a weekly newspaper that was short lived. When but twenty-three years of age Roulstone journeyed southward and by September 1790 he was printing the North-Carolina Chronicle; or, Fayetteville Gazette, in Fayetteville, a settlement in North Carolina that seemed to offer opportunities. George Roulstone, however, was of a roving, restless disposition and with the issue of March 7, 1791, he discontinued the quarto eight-page North Carolina weekly journal and, loading his printing press, type, and equipment onto a horse-drawn cart, pushed westward, over the border of North Carolina into the undeveloped and sparsely settled territory of Tennessee. On the fifth day of November, 1791, about eight months after he had abandoned publishing the North Carolina newspaper, Roulstone founded the Knoxville Gazette, the earliest printing to be executed in the territory, although it was young George Roulstone's third venture in publishing a newspaper. The paper used by Roulstone in printing his biweekly publication had to be laboriously transported by wagon-train from the well-established mills in the East. Soon - 125 -
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Papermaking
in Pioneer
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after settling in the western country, Roulstone married a comely Tennessee girl, Elizabeth Gilliam, who, in later years, was to assume a helpful position in the introduction of papermaking into her native Tennessee. George Roulstone died August 10, 1804, at the age of thirty-seven, and the publishing of his newspaper was carried on by the executors of his estate for the benefit of his young widow and her two children. Elizabeth Roulstone had acted as assistant to her husband in the conduct of the printing office and she had become familiar with the use of type, paper, and ink; she was well fortified to assume her late husband's appointment as official printer for the state, a responsible duty that gave her the distinction of being the first woman in Tennessee to hold public office. Elizabeth Roulstone was too capable and attractive to long remain a widow, and for her second venture in matrimony she chose an intrepid veteran of the Revolution, Colonel William Moore. The brave Colonel assumed publication of the Knoxville Gazette, but eventually he and his newly acquired family moved to Carthage, Tennessee, taking with them the printing press and equipment that had originally been brought from North Carolina by George Roulstone. On the thirteenth of August, 1808, the Moores established the Carthage Gazette and Friend of the People, a weekly newspaper that was published by a member of the family until 1817, or possibly a year or two later. At the commencement of printing in Tennessee in 1791, as previously mentioned, the reams of paper were carried over the mountains from the mills near the eastern coast; it was not until 1793 that a paper mill was in operation in nearby Kentucky, and no paper was produced in Western Pennsylvania prior to 1796. The need for a paper mill in Tennessee was pressing, and Colonel William Moore and his wife Elizabeth sought to supply the demand by proposing that a mill be erected and equipped, the money to be forthcoming through a lottery, a custom not uncommon in pioneer America in promoting paper mills and other industries. The earliest printed reference to the proposed Tennessee paper mill, sponsored by Colonel William Moore, appeared in the May 25,
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· 1811
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1809, issue of the Carthage Gazette and Friend of the People. The only known copy of this publication for this date is in the remarkable newspaper collection of the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts. The article occupies half of the front page of the four-column weekly newspaper and is headed "Paper Mill Lottery," followed by an account setting forth the urgency for the mill, its location, and details of the lottery. Owing to a slight damage to the paper, a few words of the text are obliterated, but in the reprinting that follows, the missing words have been supplied: The subscriber having a long time [laboured under] the difficulty of sending to a distance from this state for paper, [for use in] his printing business, has determined to build a Paper Mill [for his own] and the public accomodation·, and for the prosecution of this [object he] finds it necessary to dispose of a tract of excellent land on the waters of [Stone's] River, and a variety of other valuable property, and this he proposes to do by way of lottery, which plan he hopes to meet with the public approbation. The great public utility and private convenience which will result from the building of a Paper Mill, will, it is hoped, cause his tickets to meet with a ready sale, the more especially as labour at the mill seat and any kind of valuable produce, will be received as prompt pay. T h e Paper Mill will be situated on Charles's Creek in Warren county, and every exertion will be made to carry the business into immediate execution.
Under the subheading of the advertisement—"Scheme. Eight hundred dollars for one! ! ! "—appears a list of 951 prizes amounting to $3,100, including "ten reams of good Writing Paper at 5 dollars a ream, to be paid at the expiration of four months from the drawing of the lottery." Other deliveries of paper were promised one month later with more paper to be available six and eight months thereafter. The value of the writing paper itemized in the lottery amounted to the substantial sum of $1,030. The lottery notice was dated May 20, 1809, five days prior to the publication of the newspaper; the half-page notice is signed "William Moore," and the lottery was under the direction of "Major Joseph Colville, Robert W . Roberts, Esq., and Mr. Isham Perkins, the drawing to commence as soon as the tickets are sold, and a list of prizes shall be
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published in the Carthage Gazette." Inasmuch as ten reams of paper were to be given as prizes four months from the drawing of the lottery, it is evident that the promoters of the proposed mill had no conception of the time that would be required before the mill was actually making paper that would be acceptable for writing purposes. The subsequent reference to the paper mill lottery did not appear until more than a year later when the June 8, 1810, issue of the Carthage Gazette printed a list of four hundred fortunate prize winners who were entitled to receive "two quires of paper each, payable eight months from the drawing of the lottery." This listing also included one hundred lottery participants who "drew one quire each, payable the first that is made at the Mill." This inventory apparently concluded the paper-mill lottery transaction, as nothing more in this regard can be found in the incomplete file of this rare Tennessee newspaper. The next notice of the paper mill in the Carthage Gazette appeared in the issue dated March 8, 1811, almost two years following the initial advertisement of a lottery for raising money to build a paper mill. This notice would suggest that the mill was ready for operation, as it reads: "Wanted at the Paper Mill a good sober Paper Maker, and capable of carrying on the business—If immediate application is made to James Lyon, Warren County, or to the subscriber in Carthage, good encouragement will be given. William Moore." James Lyon, who is mentioned in the appeal for a journeyman papermaker, was the editor of the Carthage Gazette from 1809 until the latter part of 1811; he had previously been connected with newspaper publishing in Vermont, Virginia, Georgia, and Louisiana. James Lyon was probably familiar with the papermaking craft, as his father, Matthew Lyon, the crusty old New England politician, had been responsible for the first paper manufactory in Vermont prior to the year 1795. Another brief advertisement in the same issue of the Carthage Gazette (March 8, 1811) definitely stated that the Tennessee paper mill was then in operation, and the familiar solicitation for papermaking rags was present. The wording of this notice follows: "Paper Mill. The subscriber informs his
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fellow-citizens that his Paper Mill is now in operation. He will give three cents per pound for clean linen and cotton RAGS, delivered at his printing office or at the paper mill. William Moore." It has not been possible to identify conclusively any paper that may have been made in William Moore's pioneer Tennessee paper mill; apparently the paper moulds were devoid of wire-watermarking devices. The only existing record of Tennessee's earliest paper manufactory is found in the advertisements and announcements in Colonel William Moore's weekly newspaper.
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